Dreaming the English Renaissance examines ideas about dreams, actual dreams people had and recorded, and the many ways dreams were used in the culture and politics of the Tutor/Stuart age in order to provide a window into the mental life and the most profound beliefs of people of the time.Introduction 1605, The Year of Three Dreams Theorists and Practitioners: Dreaming About the Living and the Dead Religion and Witchcraft Sexuality and Power Sacred Blood and Monarchy The Royal Road to the Death of the King The Use of Dreams as a Way to Understand History
Levin's book displays a fascinating curiosity cabinet of images - from asparagus to Anne Boleyn - that visited the dreams of English men and women during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Borne along by Levin s lively and anecdotal prose, we encounter the major players in British political history, from Richard III to James I, who appear alongside familiar figures in the history of science, including Robert Burton and Nicholas Culpeper. Dreaming the Renaissance will remain a manicule, urging close scrutiny of passages in our sources that might otherwise be dismissed as sensationalism or rhetorical embellishment. - Journal of Modern History
InDreaming the English Renaissance: Politics and Desire in Court and Culture, Carole Levin attempts to trace the varied meanings of dreams in early modern England. She has succeeded admirably in achieving that goal. Levin s treatment is rich in detail drawn from an amazing variety of primary sources, such as learned tomes on dreams, plays, poems, diaries, letters, ballads, pamphlets and broadsheets, as well as on a substantial number of recent scholarly works concerning the life and times of early modern England. This is quite a good book on English dreams and dreamers of the early modern era. - Discoveries
Levin s work, as a combination of archival research, historiography, literary criticism, and cultural studies, takes parlĂM