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- Title
William Baldwin and A Mirror for Magistrates.
- Authors
PINCOMBE, MIKE
- Abstract
Over the last two decades, the first edition of A Mirror for Magistrates, compiled by William Baldwin in 1559, has been frequently claimed as a radical text composed by a group of poets committed to the promotion of various political liberties in the face of state repression. This essay argues that such claims tend to emphasize the solidarity of the poets at the expense of their individual differences, which, in turn, has led to a fundamental misreading of the part played by Baldwin in the production of the original version of the Mirror. It argues that the evidence of the prose narrative he wrote to explain how the text came into being, whilst not reliable on every point, nevertheless tells a very different story. Baldwin, though compiler, seeks to extricate himself from responsibility for the Mirror, and this is because, far from defying state repression, he yielded to it, representing himself and the others as harmless scholars rather than political radicals. In short, Baldwin depoliticizes A Mirror for Magistrates.
- Subjects
MIRROR for Magistrates, A (Book); BALDWIN, William; FERRERS, George; HISTORY in literature; NARRATION; POETRY publishing; EARLY modern English poetry; TUDOR Period, Great Britain, 1485-1603; SIXTEENTH century; POETRY (Literary form); LITERARY criticism
- Publication
Renaissance Studies, 2013, Vol 27, Issue 2, p183
- ISSN
0269-1213
- Publication type
Essay
- DOI
10.1111/j.1477-4658.2011.00795.x