Dying to be Read: Gallows Authorship in Late Seventeenth-Century England
In her essay “Dying to be Read”, Margaret Ezell’s explores a media configuration of authorship that literally necessitates the “death of the author” as a condition sine qua non: the printed “dying words” of executed men and women in the Restoration period. The essay examines this type of “gallows l...
Main Author: | Margaret J.M. Ezell |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Ghent University
2014-04-01
|
Series: | Authorship |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.authorship.ugent.be/article/view/1068/1078 |
Similar Items
-
Dying to be Read: Gallows Authorship in Late Seventeenth-Century England
by: Margaret J.M. Ezell
Published: (2014-03-01) -
Review of 'J.M. Coetzee and the Paradox of Postcolonial Authorship' by Jane Poyner.
by: Gillian Mary Dooley
Published: (2010-05-01) -
Ghostly Collaboration: the Authorship of False Criminal Confession
by: Mary Laughlin
Published: (2014-12-01) -
The Early Modern Silesian Gallows (15th–19th Century) as an Example of Stray Animals Utilization before the Rise of Institutional Veterinary Care
by: Aleksander Chrószcz, et al.
Published: (2021-04-01) -
Ghostly Collaboration: the Authorship of False Criminal Confession
by: Mary Laughlin
Published: (2014-11-01)