“And every day new Authors doe appeare…”: Labelling the Author in the Front Matter of Thomas Beedome’s Poems Divine, and Humane (1641)

Authors

  • Sarah Herbe University of Salzburg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v3i1.1069

Keywords:

Thomas Beedome, miscellanies, paratexts, encomia, early modern literature, poetry, Sarah Herbe

Abstract

In 1641, Thomas Beedome’s first and only book, Poems Divine, and Humane, was published posthumously. Considering this volume of poetry in the context of a proliferation of poetry publishing in mid-seventeenth century England and accepting the idea that early modern paratexts provided an ideal site for the renegotiation and manifestation of authorship, I argue that throughout the front matter of Beedome’s book, the largest part of which is taken up by commendatory poetry, a concept of the author, not only as singular creator, but also as proprietor of his work, is created. This essay shows how the writers of the commendatory verses try to single out Beedome by almost obsessively labelling him as a worthy author, comparing him favourably with classical and contemporary poets, and affirming the proprietary relationship between Beedome and his poems.

Author Biography

Sarah Herbe, University of Salzburg

Sarah Herbe is Assistant Professor at the Department of English and American Studies, University of Salzburg. Her research interests include life writing, paratexts, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century poetry, and relationships between poetry and popular culture. Her PhD thesis on Characters in New British Hard Science Fiction with a Focus on Genetic Engineering in Paul McAuley, Alastair Reynolds and Brian Stableford was published in 2012 (Winter). She is the editor of From the Cradle to the Grave: Life Course Models in Literary Genres (2011) and New Developments in the European Fantastic (2012).

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Published

2014-03-31

How to Cite

Herbe, S. (2014). “And every day new Authors doe appeare…”: Labelling the Author in the Front Matter of Thomas Beedome’s Poems Divine, and Humane (1641). uthorship, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v3i1.1069

Issue

Section

Special Topic: Reconfiguring Authorship