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The first major study to explore the impact of the dissolution of the monasteries and other acts of reformation violence on the literature of Shakespeare and his contemporaries.
This book has much to tell historians and literary scholars about the complexity of attitudes towards iconoclasm and religious violence in the long reformation. Its learning is deep, its moves carefully meditated, and its resolve to wayfare across artificial period boundaries a welcome prompt to students of early modern cultural history. Matthew Augustine, The Seventeenth Century
Stewart Mottram writes on representations of ruin and religious violence across English literature of the long reformation, with particular interests in Edmund Spenser and Andrew Marvell. He has held Leverhulme and AHRC Early Career Fellowships at Aberystwyth and Hull, was appointed to his current post at Hull in 2010, and has also previously taught at the University of Leeds and at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. He is author of Empire and Nation in early
English Renaissance literature (2008), co-editor of the essay collection, Writing Wales, from the Renaissance to Romanticism (2012), and has published widely on reformation themes in early modern literature, in journals including Spenser Studies and The Seventeenth Century. He is author of the Oxford
Bibliographies entry for Andrew Marvell.