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Gentry Rhetoric: Literacies, Letters, and Writing in an Elizabethan Community (Early Modern Cultural Studies)
Gentry Rhetoric examines the full range of influences on the Elizabethan and Jacobean genteel classes practice of English rhetoric in daily life. Daniel Ellis surveys how the gentry of late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Norfolk wrote to and negotiated with each other by employing Renaissance humanist rhetoric, both to solidify their identity and authority in resisting absolutism and authoritarianism, and to transform the political and social state. The rhetorical training that formed the basis of their formal education was one obvious influence. Yet to focus on this training exclusively allows only a limited understanding of the way this class developed the strategies that enabled them to negotiate, argue, and conciliate with one another to such an extent that they could both form themselves as a coherent entity and become the primary shapers of written Englishs style, arrangement, and invention. Read more