"Painting Forth the Things That Hidden Are": Thomas Nashe’s ”The Choise of Valentines” and the Printing of Privacy

dc.contributor.authorSivefors, Per
dc.date.accessioned2024-04-09T08:25:38Z
dc.date.available2024-04-09T08:25:38Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.description.abstractThis essay argues that the Elizabethan author Thomas Nashe’s (1567–1601) erotic poem »The Choise of Valentines« explores early modern senses of distinction between manuscript writing and print. In his dedication and in subsequent responses to critique against the poem, Nashe invokes a sense of intimacy with his patron and his audience – an intimacy that is associated in his texts with manuscript writing but is enacted by references to, and directly in, the medium of print. In other words, »The Choise of Valentines« constructs a fiction of privacy that is rhetorically and commercially exploited in the medium of print – which is, in turn, constructed as the public opposite of the intimate, private medium of manuscript writing.sv
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2077/80641
dc.language.isoengsv
dc.publisherLIR. journalsv
dc.title"Painting Forth the Things That Hidden Are": Thomas Nashe’s ”The Choise of Valentines” and the Printing of Privacysv
dc.typeTextsv
dc.type.sveparticle, peer reviewed scientificsv

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