My university syllabus featured 16th century English poetry last semester - and we got Sidney, Spenser and Donne. While Donne at least provided some variety and some space for interpretation, love poetry by Sidney and Spenser was pure torture. I know it's part of the 'Petrarchan tradition' to whine and moan about love and the beloved -- for like, 20 or more sonnets, repetitively -- but what the hell is the point in studying this?
The intro to Spenser's 'Epithalamion' written by respected critics claims it's an absolute 'masterpiece' - whereas all I see is some interesting supernatural metaphors (references to greek gods etc) and a buttload of repetition (it's like, by the end of the 20th sonnet - it's enough! I get it, Spenser, you love the woman and she's awesome - enough already!)
I don't understand why they sometimes include pointless crap in the undergraduate syllabus - I don't see how studying Petrarchan love poetry in any way contributes to my understanding of literature. Any explanations you guys can offer me for this? Am I just being facile?



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