Student essay by John DeStefano.
Margaret Downs-Gamble examines Donne's poems in terms of the manuscript culture of the times.
Excerpt from the Eric Griffiths review of William Empson's posthumous Essays on Renaissance Literature.
Studies in the Age of Donne. Tables of contents through 1998.
From the West Virginia Shakespeare and Renaissance Association. Book reviews and several articles on Donne and his works.
Suggests that "Donne's colon and semicolon usage reveals several Donnean principles of punctuation." By Emma L. Roth-Schwartz.
Covers the period from Sir Thomas North to Michael Drayton, which includes "Donne's Relation to Petrarch," "His Life," "Songs and Sonets," "Letters and Funerall Elegies," and "His Position and Influence."
"Donne's spatial imagination: its cosmographic assumptions, and its many contradictions," by Lisa Gorton.
Analyzes Donne's poetry in terms of his change in lifestyles throughout his career. By Yoshiko Fujito.
Ted-Larry Pebworth argues that Donne engaged the 1587 edition of Fetherstone's "Lamentations" to translate the text into English.
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