EARLY MODERN LITERARY STUDIES: A JOURNAL OF SIXTEENTH- AND SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE ------------------------------------------------------------------ Volume 1, Number 2 (August 1995) ------------------------------------------------------------------ This is the ASCII text version of _EMLS_, distributed to readers via electronic mail and GOPHER, and is a derivative of the master version available on our World Wide Web site, at: http://unixg.ubc.ca:7001/0/e-sources/emls/emlshome.html In the ASCII version, *bold text* is indicated by tags which surround the text that is to appear in bold, likewise with %italicized text%, and _underlined text_; foreign characters are represented by their SGML equivalents. All items (articles, notes, reviews, and the like) are separated with a full line of dashes with a vertical bar at each end, as below. |----------------------------------------------------------------| CONTENTS Front Matter: - Publishing Information, Journal Availability, Contact Addresses. - Editorial Group. - Submission Information. Foreword: - A Brief Look Backward and Forward from _EMLS'_ Second Issue. [1]. Raymond G. Siemens, University of British Columbia. Articles: - Article Abstracts / Résumés des Articles. - The Texts of _Troilus and Cressida_. [2]. W.L. Godshalk, University of Cincinnati. - 'Not Onely a Pastour, but a Lawyer also': George Herbert's Vision of Stuart Magistracy. [3]. Jeffrey Powers-Beck, East Tennessee State University. - From Book to Screen: A Window on Renaissance Electronic Texts. [4]. Michael Best, University of Victoria, BC. Note: - Affliction and Flight in Herbert's Poetry: A Note. [5]. P.G. Stanwood, University of British Columbia. Bibliography: - A Bibliography of Thomas More's _Utopia_. [6]. Romuald Ian Lakowski. Reviews: - Vaughan Hart. _Art and Magic in the Court of the Stuarts._ London and New York: Routledge, 1994. [7]. Graham Parry, University of York. - Stevie Davies. _Henry Vaughan_. Wales: Seren, Poetry Wales Press, 1995. [8]. Jeffrey Powers-Beck, East Tennessee State University. - Alvin Snider. _Origin and Authority in Seventeenth-Century England: Bacon, Milton, Butler_. Toronto: Toronto UP, 1994. [9]. Philip Edward Phillips, Vanderbilt University. - Katharine Eisman Maus. _Inwardness and Theater in the English Renaissance_. Chicago: Chicago UP, 1995. [10]. Robert Appelbaum, University of California, Berkeley. - A.W. Johnson. _Ben Jonson: Poetry and Architecture_. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1994. [11]. Robert C. Evans, Auburn University at Montgomery. - Electronic Texts, File Formats, and Copyright: The _Christian Classics Ethereal Library_. [12]. Perry Willett, Indiana University. - Reviewing Information, Books Received for Review, and Forthcoming Reviews. Professional Notes: - The Bibliography and First-Line Index of English Verse, 1559-1603. [13]. Steven W. May, Georgetown College. - _The Shepheardes Calender_ Hypermedia Edition. [14]. John Tolva, Washington University. Readers' Forum: Responses to articles, reviews, and notes appearing in this issue that are intended for the Readers' Forum may be sent to the Editor at EMLS@arts.ubc.ca. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Individual contributions which make this issue are copyright (c) 1995 by their authors, all rights reserved. Volume 1.2 as a whole is copyright (c) 1995 by _Early Modern Literary Studies_, all rights reserved, and may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of U.S. copyright law. Archiving and redistribution for profit, or republication of this text in any medium, requires the consent of the author and the Editor of _EMLS_. |----------------------------------------------------------------| FRONT MATTER: PUBLISHING INFORMATION, JOURNAL AVAILABILITY, _EMLS_ CONTACT ADDRESSES _Early Modern Literary Studies_ is a refereed journal in electronic form which serves both as a formal arena for scholarly discussion and as an academic resource for researchers in the area. Articles in _EMLS_ examine English literature, literary culture, and language during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries from a variety of perspectives; well-considered responses to published papers are also published as part of a Readers' Forum. Reviews in _EMLS_ evaluate recent work in the area as well as academic tools of interest to scholars in the field. Our Internet site also gathers and maintain links to useful on-line resources. _EMLS_ (ISSN 1201-2459) is published three times a year for the on-line academic community by the University of British Columbia's English Department, with the support of the University's Library and Arts Computing Centre. _EMLS_ does not appear in print form, but can be obtained free of charge, along with _Interactive EMLS_ and _EMLS On-Line Resources_, in hypertextual format on the World Wide Web at http://unixg.ubc.ca:7001/0/e-sources/emls/emlshome.html The journal, alone, is also available in ASCII format for retrieval using GOPHER at edziza.arts.ubc.ca /english/EMLS and by electronic mail subscription by sending a message to Subscribe_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca Contact us! Journal E-mail Subscription: - To subscribe to the version of _EMLS_ that is distributed through electronic mail, please send a message including your name, affiliation, and electronic mail address to Subscribe_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca. Journal Information, Comments, Mailing List: - For more information, to join our mailing list, or to offer your comments on _EMLS_, please contact our Editorial Assistant at Ed_Asst_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca. Site Information, Comments, &c.: - All correspondence pertaining to our site may be sent to our Electronic Editors at Webmaster_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca. Editor: - Correspondence to the Editor may be sent to EMLS@arts.ubc.ca. Hard-copy correspondence may be addressed to: _Early Modern Literary Studies_, Department of English, University of British Columbia, #397 - 1873 East Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z1. Fax: (604) 822-6906. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Editorial Group The _EMLS_ Editorial Group is representative of the on-line academic community as a whole and includes scholars with wide-ranging interests and experience, from junior to well-established senior academics. Senior Editorial and Advisory Board: - Gordon Campbell, University of Leicester - Hardy M. Cook III, Bowie State University - Roy Flannagan, Ohio University - W.L. Godshalk, University of Cincinnati - Ian Lancashire, New College, University of Toronto - Graham Parry, University of York, England - Paul G. Stanwood, University of British Columbia Advisory Editors: - John Archer, University of British Columbia - Richard W. Bailey, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor - Glenn Black, Oriel College, Oxford - Ronald Bond, University of Calgary - Luc Borot, Centre d'Etudes et de Récherches sur la Renaissance Anglaise, Université Paul-Valery, Montpellier, France - Douglas Bruster, University of Chicago - Thomas Corns, University of Wales, Bangor - Peter Donaldson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology - A.S.G. Edwards, University of Victoria - Jane Finnan, University of Toronto - Antonia Forster, University of Akron - John K. Hale, University of Otago, New Zealand - Robert S. Knapp, Reed College - F.J. Levy, University of Washington - Lawrence Manley, Yale University - John Manning, Queen's University of Belfast - Mark Morton, University of Winnipeg - Stephen Orgel, Stanford University - Milla Riggio, Trinity College, CT - Alan Rudrum, Simon Fraser University Editor: - Raymond G. Siemens, University of British Columbia Associate Editor: - Joanne Woolway, Oriel College, Oxford Associate Editor (Reviews): - Patricia Badir, University of British Columbia Editorial Assistants: - Cathryn Gunn, University of British Columbia - Gretchen E. Minton, University of British Columbia Electronic Editors: - David L. Gants, University of Virginia (Managing Editor, Electronic Texts) - Joseph Jones, University of British Columbia - Jeff Miller, University of British Columbia (Site Management and On-line Development) - David Thomson, University of British Columbia - Perry Willett, Indiana University (Managing Editor, On-line Resources) ------------------------------------------------------------------ Submission Information _EMLS_ invites contributions of critical essays on literary topics and of interdisciplinary studies which centre on literature and literary culture in English during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Contributions, including critical essays and studies, bibliographies, notices, letters to the Editor, and other materials, may be submitted to the Editor by electronic mail at EMLS@arts.ubc.ca or by regular mail at _Early Modern Literary Studies_, Department of English, University of British Columbia, #397 - 1873 East Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z1; reviews and materials for review may be sent to the Review Editor at Review_Editor_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca or by regular mail at the same address. Brief hard-copy correspondence may be sent by fax to (604) 822-6906. Electronic mail submissions are accepted in ASCII format. Regular mail submissions of material on-disk are accepted in ASCII, WordPerfect, or Microsoft Word format; hard-copy submissions must be accompanied by electronic copies, either on-disk or via electronic mail, and will not be returned. All submissions must follow the current _Modern Language Association Handbook_, in addition to the following conventions used by _Early Modern Literary Studies_ for ASCII text: bold text is indicated by tags which surround the text that is to appear in bold, likewise with italicized text, underlined text, and superscript; superscript is used for note numbers in the text, and notes themselves appear at the end of the document. A document outlining the representation of non-ASCII characters is available on-site or by request. For more information regarding submission of materials, send a message to Ed_Asst_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca. .