1st Edition
Early Modern Literature and England’s Long Reformation
Introduction: Early Modern Literature and England’s Long Reformation
David Loewenstein and Alison Shell
1. Mirroring the "Long Reformation": Translating Erasmus’ Colloquies in Early Modern England
Cathy Shrank
2. "Straunge and Prodigious Miracles"? John Foxe’s Reformation of Virgin Martyr Legends
Thomas S. Freeman and Susannah Brietz Monta
3. Astrology and Religion in the Long Reformation: "Doctor Faustus in Swadling Clouts"
Phebe Jensen
4. "Superstition Remains at This Hour": The Friers Chronicle (1623) and England’s Long Reformation
Harriet Lyon
5. Theology, Plain and Simple: Biblical Hermeneutics: Language Philosophy, and Trinitarianism in the Seventeenth Century
Kristen Poole
6. "Not Revenged, nor Repented of": Martyrs and England’s Long Reformation
Karl Gunther
7. Preaching the "Long Reformation" in the English Revolution
Ann Hughes
8. Milton and the Creation of England’s Long Reformation
David Loewenstein
9. Working, across the Very Long Reformation: Four Models
James Simpson
10. Sacrilege, Tractarian Fiction and the Very Long Reformation
Alison Shell
Biography
David Loewenstein is Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English and the Humanities at Penn State–University Park, USA. He has published widely on Milton and on literature in relation to politics and religion in early modern England. He is an Honored Scholar of the Milton Society of America.
Alison Shell is Professor of Early Modern Studies in the Department of English at University College London, UK. She has published widely on the subject of literature and religion, with a particular emphasis on the literary culture of Catholics and Anglicans. Her most recent publication, co-edited with Judith Maltby, is Anglican Women Novelists (2019).






