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The Rhetoric of Fame: Persuading the People in Early Modern England

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
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Kate De Rycker demonstrates that the social role of 16th-century English writers was becoming increasingly affected by the developing concept of celebrity.
By looking at the 'Marprelate Controversy', the 'paper war' between the fictional persona of the Puritan Martin Marprelate, the established Church, and later professional writers, Kate De Rycker (University of Newcastle) argues that celebrity can indeed be considered to be a developing concept in the late sixteenth century, with the rise of cheap print, the awareness of an unknowable audience, and the language of rhetorical persuasion. 

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Episode Information

Series
Art and Action: The Intersections of Literary Celebrity and Politics
People
Kate De Rycker
Keywords
Marprelate controversy
literary fame
politics
early modern England
public persona
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 03/04/2016
Duration: 00:27:20

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