A study of the Book of Common Prayer's influence on English history and literature.This study argues that the Church of Englands Book of Common Prayer should be central to our understanding of Englands political, religious, intellectual, and literary history. Rosendale considers its engagement with early modern nationalism, individualism, and theology, and its influence on the work of Sidney, Shakespeare, Milton, and Hobbes.This study argues that the Church of Englands Book of Common Prayer should be central to our understanding of Englands political, religious, intellectual, and literary history. Rosendale considers its engagement with early modern nationalism, individualism, and theology, and its influence on the work of Sidney, Shakespeare, Milton, and Hobbes.The Book of Common Prayer is one of the most important and influential books in English history, but it has received relatively little attention from literary scholars. This study seeks to remedy this by attending to the prayerbook's importance in England's political, intellectual, religious, and literary history. The first half of the book presents extensive analyses of the Book of Common Prayer's involvement in early modern discourses of nationalism and individualism, and argues that the liturgy sought to engage and textually reconcile these potentially competing cultural impulses. In its second half, Liturgy and Literature traces these tensions in subsequent works by four major authors - Sidney, Shakespeare, Milton, and Hobbes - and contends that they operate within the dialectical parameters laid out in the prayerbook decades earlier. Rosendale's analyses are supplemented by a brief history of the Book of Common Prayer, and by an appendix which discusses its contents.Introduction; Part I. Prelude/Mattins: through 1549: 1. The Book of Common Prayer and national identity; 2. The Book of Common Prayer and individual identity; Part II. Interlude: 15491662: 3. Representation and authority in Renaissance ló<