Renaissance Essays: Robert Greene
knotline.gif

These essays are not intended to replace library research. They are here to
show you what others think about a given subject, and to perhaps spark an
interest or an idea in you. To take one of these essays, copy it, and to pass
it off as your own is known as plagiarism—academic dishonesty which will
result (in every university I've heard tell of) in suspension or dismissal from
the university. Not only are your professors as technology savvy as you are,
they will not tolerate theft of another's intellectual efforts.


Robert Greene =Student Essay
Thesis: The Didactic Demons of Drama: Moral Instruction on Magic in the Plays of Greene and Gryphius - Richard G. Janzen [.pdf]
Thesis: Print, Patronage, and the Satiric Pamphlet: The Death of Robert Greene as a Defining Textual Moment - Arul Kumaran [.pdf]
Thesis: Men Disguised as Women in Elizabethan Drama - Marion S. Karr [.pdf]
The Talking Brass Head as a Symbol of Dangerous Knowledge in Friar Bacon and in Alphonsus, King of Aragon - Kevin LaGrandeur [.pdf]
Oriental Matter Revisited: Representations of the "Turk" in Robert Greene's Selimus - Mustafa Şahiner [.pdf]
Robert Greene's Selimus: Eine litterarhistorische Untersuchung - Ernst Hugo Gilbert
The "extremities" of sumptuary law in Robert Greene's Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay - Kirk Melnikoff
Patriotism and Social Tension in Elizabethan Domestic Drama - Dr. William R. Dynes
Paulina's Paint and the Dialectic of Masculine Desire in the Metamorphoses,
              Pandosto, and The Winter's Tale - Joel Davis
The Player-Patron in Greene's Groatsworth of Wit (1592) - D. Allen Carroll
"An Account of Robert Greene" in The School of Shakespeare (1878) - Richard Simpson
Greene and Lodge's Heroines: Sephestia and Rosalynd - Emily Cho


  Robert Greene | Life | Works | Links | Essays | Books | Renaissance Drama | Renaissance Lit


Backto Robert Greene

Site copyright ©1996-2010 Anniina Jokinen. All Rights Reserved.
This page created by Anniina Jokinen on July 12, 2006. Last updated June 2, 2010.