Christopher Marlowe /
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Jos Study Centre | PR2673 .C46 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0182433 | |
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Faculty of Arts | PR2673.C47 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 00165 | |
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Minna Study Centre | PR2673 .C46 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0001006 |
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PR13234 .I43 2004 The bottled leopard / | PR1924 .C49 1998 Chaucer: The Canterbury tales | PR2037 .S53 2009 Twelfth night, William Shakespeare : note / | PR2673 .C46 1999 Christopher Marlowe / | PR2819.A2 K56. 2010 King Lear : | PR2823 .S24 2002 McBETH William Shakepeare | PR2976 .S325 1994 Discovering Shakespeare's meaning : |
"Christopher Marlowe has provoked some of the most radical criticism of recent years. There is an elective affinity, it seems, between this pre-modern dramatist and the post-modern critics whose best work has been inspired by his plays. The reason suggested by this collection of essays is that Marlowe shares the post-modern preoccupation with the language of powerand the power of language itself. As Richard Wilson shows in his introduction, it is no accident that the founding essays of New Historicism were on Marlowe; nor that current Queer Theorists focus so much on his images of gender and homosexuality
Marlowe staged both the birth of the modern author and the origin of modern sexual desire, and it is this unique conjunction that makes his drama a key to contemporary debates about the state and the self: from pornography to gays in the military."--Jacket
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