<p>âLike many works not yet in the publication pipeline at the time of the authorâs death, it could easily have been lost to us if Sharpeâs friend and colleague Mark Knights had not seen it through its final stages. We all owe Knights a debt of gratitude, both because of the book's quality and the fact that it is a fitting monument to one of the foremost historians of the early modern world.â</p><p></p><p></p><p>âSharpe writes beautifully and the book is a long, lush walk through the public rituals of monarchy, the depiction of monarchs by artists and hack engravers, wordsmiths and preachers. Sharpe clearly enjoyed exploring the nuances of this world of physical and allegorical spectacle and offers a wealth of examples to illustrate his argument. And it is a convincing one.â</p><p>âThis reviewer . . . was left dazzled and admiring of the wonderful scholarship that [Sharpe] displays and the insights that he offers [and] . . . Â is to be recommended to any student of the period. It will be the starting point for any consideration of the cultural presentation of the early modern English monarchy for the foreseeable future.ââDaniel Szechi, <i>BBC History Magazine</i></p>
- Daniel Szechi, BBC History Magazine
"Few scholars, if any, can match Sharpeâs knowledge of such a broad range of materials across the early modern period, or can boast of having written so authoritatively about both the Tudor and Stuart centuries and about both the pre- and post- Civil War eras."âTim Harris, <i>Literary Review</i>
- Tim Harris, Literary Review
<p>âThe strengths of Sharpeâs earlier work are still in evidence: wide-reading, detailed and subtle exposition of written and visual texts.ââJean Wilson, <i>TLS</i></p>
- Jean Wilson, TLS
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
The late Kevin Sharpe was Leverhulme Research Professor of Renaissance Studies at Queen Mary College, University of London. He was the author of The Personal Rule of Charles 1, Reading Revolutions, Selling the Tudor Monarchy, and Image Wars.