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A Ciceronian Sunburn: A Tudor Dialogue on Humanistic Rhetoric and Civic Poetics.


Edward Armstrong. A Ciceronian Sunburn: A Tudor Dialogue on Humanistic Rhetoric and Civic Poetics.

Columbia: University of South Carolina Press The University of South Carolina Press (or USC Press), founded in 1944, is a university press that is part of the University of South Carolina. External link
  • University of South Carolina Press


  
, 2006. xiv + 224 pp. index. illus. bibl. $44.95. ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
: 1-57003-614-4.

This is a rather confusingly titled study of the interrelations between Tudor works on rhetoric by William Temple, Abraham Fraunce, George Puttenham, and Lodowick Bryskett (whose Discourse of Civill Life is formally a dialogue), the prose and poetry of Sidney and Spenser (including the annotations of E. K.), and the works of Ramus ramus /ra·mus/ (ra´mus) pl. ra´mi   [L.] a branch, as of a nerve, vein, or artery.

ramus articula´ris
 and Cicero, especially the De oratore, in which the latter sets forth his views in a dialogue between Antonius and Crassus. Antonius claims that reading historians colored his speech with a kind of "sunburn," and Armstrong presents all these works as in dialogue with one another and variously colored by Ciceronian assumptions, just as he himself has been sunburned by Kenneth Burke: "Vaguely unconventional and ... derivative of the dialogue genre, my method makes modest gestures toward that 'disorderly order' E. K. finds troublesome in poetry" (12), he avers Coordinates:  Avers is a municipality in the district of Hinterrhein in the Swiss canton of Graubünden. , wisely anticipating that some readers may find it even more troublesome in scholarship.

Armstrong admits that Cicero's influence on Renaissance humanism is hardly news, yet he focuses on linking oratory to poetry through their Ciceronian emphasis on rhetoric as moving hearers to civil action, distinguishing this from the Ramist tendency to subordinate it to logic as a form of knowledge. Sidney and Spenser thus emerge as Cicero's true heirs rather than the Tudor rhetoricians colored by Ramus's narrower conception of the art. This thesis has some plausibility, although Armstrong's larger claim--that "rhetorico-poetic discourse" leads-more directly to political action and "productive ethical inquiry" (184) than does current literary theory--seems overblown. While lamenting that literary interpretation risks "handing meaning over to a priestly cast of critics 'in the know' about the precepts, conventions, novelties, and complexities that circumscribe cir·cum·scribe  
tr.v. cir·cum·scribed, cir·cum·scrib·ing, cir·cum·scribes
1. To draw a line around; encircle.

2. To limit narrowly; restrict.

3. To determine the limits of; define.
 and define a particular poetic theory," his own rhetorico-poetic analysis hardly escapes that charge (65).

The most useful sections are those treating the understudied Tudor rhetoricians. The chapter devoted to Bryskett's Discourse clarifies its anti-Ramistic thrust and argues (unsurprisingly) that it shares assumptions with both Cicero and Spenser. By contrast, the Ramistic assumptions underlying E. K.'s commentary on The Shepheardes Calendar are illuminated in chapters 3 and 4. But these two chapters assume without real argument that Spenser himself is E. K., a fictitious annotator whom the poet created to dramatize dram·a·tize  
v. dram·a·tized, dram·a·tiz·ing, dram·a·tiz·es

v.tr.
1. To adapt (a literary work) for dramatic presentation, as in a theater or on television or radio.

2.
 his deficiencies. Believers in Edward Kirke's authorship may find Armstrong's analysis of the eclogues Eclogues

short pieces by Roman poet Vergil with pastoral setting. [Rom. Lit.: Benét, 1053]

See : Pastoralism
 convoluted and too finespun in rigidly distinguishing Colin Cloute from Immerito, then deducing that the kindly Dido whom Colin laments in "November" "had led an intrinsically meaningless life" in Spenser's view (76). Likewise implausible are Armstrong's claims that in "Aprill" Spenser regards Colin's statement that Eliza's beauty outshines the sun as a "hyperbolic, and hackneyed, comparison" (112) and Colin's flower catalogue as only a "facile, ephemeral, and technically proficient exercise in copia" (202, n. 40)--for in the Epithalamion In ancient Greece an epithalamion was composed to honor a newlywed couple. The word derives from the Greek epithalamios which means "of a wedding", epi (of) + thalamos (bridal chamber.  Spenser celebrates his own bride's eyes as outshining the stars, while the Prothalamion Prothalamion

Spenser’s poem celebrating the double marriage of the two daughters of the Earl of Worcester. [Br. Poetry: Haydn & Fuller, 615]

See : Marriage
 also features a flower catalogue. The chapter on the View of Ireland more persuasively stresses Ciceronian influence by noting its fundamentally political, rather than religious, orientation and its criticisms of English law and vacillating foreign policy. At the end, though, we may wonder why we should condemn the harsh realpolitik realpolitik

Politics based on practical objectives rather than on ideals. The word does not mean “real” in the English sense but rather connotes “things”—hence a politics of adaptation to things as they are.
 Spenser advocated since, applied ruthlessly, it did indeed pacify Ireland for three centuries.

The Ramist mistrust of Spenser's poetry that E. K. exemplifies is echoed in Fraunce's Lawiers Logike and paralleled by Temple's Latin confutation con·fu·ta·tion  
n.
1. The act of confuting.

2. Something that confutes.

Noun 1. confutation - the speech act of refuting conclusively
 of Sidney's Defence. Astrophil and Stella and book 6 of The Faerie Queene also receive particular attention. Since dialogic form is "imprecise, meandering ... and informal by design" (33), the index might helpfully have included all technical rhetorical terms discussed at intervals throughout. And Armstrong's concern for logic and rhetoric does not, alas, extend to grammar: "My argument suggest [sic] that the ramifications ramifications nplAuswirkungen pl  (or ramistifications?) of Ramism's 'indelible trace' obviates [sic] ethical and political inquiry that is productive" (183). Among other errors, more than a dozen such failures of subject-verb agreement litter the text: the press was poorly served by its copyeditor.

MICHAEL WEST

University of Pittsburgh
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Author:West, Michael
Publication:Renaissance Quarterly
Article Type:Book review
Date:Dec 22, 2006
Words:697
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