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"Profit and delight"
"Profit and Delight gives long overdue attention to a popular literary phenomenon that defies today's conventional understandings of literature. Claiming to educate young gentlemen in the social arts, miscellanies were booklets that circulated widely in early modern England. They bundled together writing from diverse sources - play texts, songbooks, educational tracts, poetry collections - but rarely acknowledged authorship. The material, which was frequently altered from the original, was of a Royalist bent and often celebrated drinking and carousing. Readers could learn about courtship, however, through poetry, word games, sample love letters and event romantic one-liners." "Who produced and who actually read miscellanies are among many questions explored in this in-depth study. Rejecting traditional author-centric approaches, Adam Smyth instead draws upon research into the early...
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