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Identity, Intertextuality, and Performance in Early Modern Song Culture. Dieuwke van der Poel, Louis Peter Grijp, and Wim van Anrooij, eds. Intersections: Interdisciplinary Studies in Early Modern Culture 43. Leiden: Brill, 2016. xx + 378 pp. $181.

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the contributors, and candidly lays out the varying (arguably unreconcilable) perspectives and values of a Champion and a Gregory. Despite the grail of a new, consensual general framework that the… Click to show full abstract

the contributors, and candidly lays out the varying (arguably unreconcilable) perspectives and values of a Champion and a Gregory. Despite the grail of a new, consensual general framework that the editors want to construct, it is hard not to conclude that the best ticket remains what Bulman calls Van Kley’s “ultimately pragmatist” (33) approach, one in which Enlightenment is at once unitary and pluralized.

Keywords: intertextuality performance; performance early; van; early modern; identity intertextuality; culture

Journal Title: Renaissance Quarterly
Year Published: 2017

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