Luminarium Book Store: Thomas Nashe
Luminarium Book Store


Thomas Nashe

To buy a book from Amazon.com (US) just click on the title.
To buy a book from Amazon.co.uk (UK) use link under description (if available).



Works
Book coverThe Unfortunate Traveller and Other Works
by Thomas Nashe, J. B. Steane (Editor)
US $11.16
Paperback
Viking Press, September 1985
In addition to The Unfortunate Traveller, this volume
contains Pierce Penniless, The Terrors of the Night,
Lenten Stuff
and The Choice of Valentines, and
extracts from Christ's Tears over Jerusalem, The
Anatomy of Absurdity,
and other works.
Order it from Amazon.co.uk


Thomas Nashe's Summer's Last Will and Testament :
A Critical Modern-Spelling Edition
by Thomas Nashe, Patricia Posluszny (Editor)
US: $36.95
Hardcover
Peter Lang Publishing, January 1990



Pierce Penilesse
by Thomas Nash
US $69.00
Library Binding
Reprint Services Corp, January 1924


Other
Book coverUnread Herrings : Thomas Nashe and the Prosaics of the Real
(Renaissance and Baroque Studies and Texts, Vol 11)
by James Nielson
US $43.95
Hardcover
Peter Lang Publishing, February 1994


Thomas Nashe in Context
by Lorna Hutson
US $98.00
Hardcover
Oxford University Press; April 1989
"[C]hallenges the tendency to read Nashe's pamphlets
as commercially-motivated, and argues that each text's
significance lies in its parody of the rhetorical media
determining contemporary assumptions about the
authority of printed discourse. The author also shows
links between the Elizabethan promotion of individualistic
economic providence and the humanist urging of provident
approaches to the potential for meaning offered by literary
texts." —The Publisher
Order it from Amazon.co.uk


Book cover Literature and Degree in Renaissance England :
Nashe, Bourgeois Tragedy, Shakespeare

by Peter Holbrook
US $34.50
Hardcover
Univ of Delaware Pr; February 1994
"analyzing the work of the pamphleteer Thomas Nashe,
Holbrook offers an account of Nashe's style as an attempt
to turn to advantage its author's difficult and ambiguous
social position. Holbrook also discusses plays (such as
Arden of Faversham, A Yorkshire Tragedy, and A Woman
Killed with Kindness) that complicate the high genre of
tragedy by representing middling or non-aristocratic
characters in that mode. Finally, he turns to some
Shakespearean treatments of degree in both comedies
and tragedies." —The Publisher





Search:
Keywords:
In Association with
                     Amazon.com


Search:
Keywords:
Amazon.co.uk logo





Backto Luminarium Bookstore

Back

to Luminarium Front Page


Background, code, and content copyright ©1997-2000 Anniina Jokinen.

Amazon Books