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Counter-Reformation Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Phebe Jensen

This literature criticism consists of approximately 28 pages of analysis & critique of Counter-Reformation.
This section contains 8,245 words
(approx. 28 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our The Literature of the Counter-Reformation - Critical Essay by Phebe Jensen

Critical Essay by Phebe Jensen

SOURCE: Jensen, Phebe. “Ballads and Brags: Free Speech and Recusant Culture in Elizabethan England.” Criticism 40, no. 3 (summer 1998): 333-54.

In the following essay, Jensen discusses how the religious censorship practiced by the Elizabethan government was challenged in a sermon by Bishop John Jewell and a manuscript by Edmund Campion.

Writing to a friend in 1586, the English Catholic exile Sir Francis Englefield described the attempt to reconvert England to the old faith: “In stede therfore of the sword, which we cannot obtayne, we must fight with paper and pennes, which can not be taken from us.”1 Although the Counter-Reformation in England is usually characterized by those few dramatic episodes of violence—the Rising of the Northern Earls, the Spanish Armada, the Babington and other conspiracies to assassinate Elizabeth—which were successfully used by the government to galvanize public opposition to Catholicism, in fact the Catholic assault on England was primarily,...
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This section contains 8,245 words
(approx. 28 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our The Literature of the Counter-Reformation - Critical Essay by Phebe Jensen
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The Literature of the Counter-Reformation - Critical Essay by Phebe Jensen from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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