Ghost Complaint: Historiography, Gender, and the Return of the Dead in Elizabethan Literature

In this study, I read Elizabethan ghost complaint poetry as a locus for understanding the eras obsessive desire to speak with, for, and as the dead. In charting the rise to popularity of this now neglected poetic form, I employ and advance theories of haunting temporality as articulated in modern as...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jellerson, Donald C
Other Authors: Peter Lake
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: VANDERBILT 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu//available/etd-07152009-131430/
Description
Summary:In this study, I read Elizabethan ghost complaint poetry as a locus for understanding the eras obsessive desire to speak with, for, and as the dead. In charting the rise to popularity of this now neglected poetic form, I employ and advance theories of haunting temporality as articulated in modern as well as early modern philosophy, historiography, and gender theory. My study of ghost complaint poems revises our understanding of how early modern poets and dramatists appropriate historiographic discourses and deploy gendered voices.