Shakespeare and Modern Theatre

Shakespeare and Modern Theatre
Title Shakespeare and Modern Theatre PDF eBook
Author Michael Bristol
Publisher Routledge
Pages 217
Release 2005-07-08
Genre Art
ISBN 1134601204

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First published in 2001. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Shakespeare and Modern Theatre

Shakespeare and Modern Theatre
Title Shakespeare and Modern Theatre PDF eBook
Author Michael Bristol
Publisher Routledge
Pages 220
Release 2005-07-08
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1134601190

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The book gathers together a particularly strong line-up of contributors from across the literary-performative divide to examine the relationship between Shakespeare, the 'culture industries', modernism and live performance.

Shakespeare and Modern Theatre

Shakespeare and Modern Theatre
Title Shakespeare and Modern Theatre PDF eBook
Author Michael D. Bristol
Publisher Psychology Press
Pages 228
Release 2001
Genre Electronic books
ISBN 9780415219853

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First published in 2001. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Historical Affects and the Early Modern Theater

Historical Affects and the Early Modern Theater
Title Historical Affects and the Early Modern Theater PDF eBook
Author Ronda Arab
Publisher Routledge
Pages 273
Release 2015-05-15
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1317690702

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This collection of original essays honors the groundbreaking scholarship of Jean E. Howard by exploring cultural and economic constructions of affect in the early modern theater. While historicist and materialist inquiry has dominated early modern theater studies in recent years, the historically specific dimensions of affect and emotion remain underexplored. This volume brings together these lines of inquiry for the first time, exploring the critical turn to affect in literary studies from a historicist perspective to demonstrate how the early modern theater showcased the productive interconnections between historical contingencies and affective attachments. Considering well-known plays such as Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra and Thomas Dekker’s The Shoemaker’s Holiday together with understudied texts such as court entertainments, and examining topics ranging from dramatic celebrity to women’s political agency to the parental emotion of grief, this volume provides a fresh and at times provocative assessment of the "historical affects"—financial, emotional, and socio-political—that transformed Renaissance theater. Instead of treating history and affect as mutually exclusive theoretical or philosophical contexts, the essays in this volume ask readers to consider how drama emplaces the most personal, unspeakable passions in matrices defined in part by financial exchange, by erotic desire, by gender, by the material body, and by theatricality itself. As it encourages this conversation to take place, the collection provides scholars and students alike with a series of new perspectives, not only on the plays, emotions, and histories discussed in its pages, but also on broader shifts and pressures animating literary studies today.

Poverty and Charity in Early Modern Theater and Performance

Poverty and Charity in Early Modern Theater and Performance
Title Poverty and Charity in Early Modern Theater and Performance PDF eBook
Author Robert Henke
Publisher University of Iowa Press
Pages 217
Release 2015-08
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1609383613

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Whereas previous studies of poverty and early modern theatre have concentrated on England and the criminal rogue, Poverty and Charity in Early Modern Theatre and Performance takes a transnational approach, which reveals a greater range of attitudes and charitable practices regarding the poor than state poor laws and rogue books suggest. Close study of German and Latin beggar catalogues, popular songs performed in Italian piazzas, the Paduan actor-playwright Ruzante, the commedia dell’arte in both Italy and France, and Shakespeare demonstrate how early modern theatre and performance could reveal the gap between official policy and actual practices regarding the poor. The actor-based theatre and performance traditions examined in this study, which persistently explore felt connections between the itinerant actor and the vagabond beggar, evoke the poor through complex and variegated forms of imagination, thought, and feeling. Early modern theatre does not simply reflect the social ills of hunger, poverty, and degradation, but works them through the forms of poverty, involving displacement, condensation, exaggeration, projection, fictionalization, and marginalization. As the critical mass of medieval charity was put into question, the beggar-almsgiver encounter became more like a performance. But it was not a performance whose script was prewritten as the inevitable exposure of the dissembling beggar. Just as people’s attitudes toward the poor could rapidly change from skepticism to sympathy during famines and times of acute need, fictions of performance such as Edgar’s dazzling impersonation of a mad beggar in Shakespeare’s King Lear could prompt responses of sympathy and even radical calls for economic redistribution.

Shakespeare's Theatres and the Effects of Performance

Shakespeare's Theatres and the Effects of Performance
Title Shakespeare's Theatres and the Effects of Performance PDF eBook
Author Farah Karim Cooper
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 317
Release 2015-01-05
Genre Drama
ISBN 1408157055

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How did Elizabethan and Jacobean acting companies create their visual and aural effects? What materials were available to them and how did they influence staging and writing? What impact did the sensations of theatre have on early modern audiences? How did the construction of the playhouses contribute to technological innovations in the theatre? What effect might these innovations have had on the writing of plays? Shakespeare's Theatres and The Effects of Performance is a landmark collection of essays by leading international scholars addressing these and other questions to create a unique and comprehensive overview of the practicalities and realities of the theatre in the early modern period.

Embodied Cognition and Shakespeare's Theatre

Embodied Cognition and Shakespeare's Theatre
Title Embodied Cognition and Shakespeare's Theatre PDF eBook
Author Laurie Johnson
Publisher Routledge
Pages 281
Release 2014-03-26
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1134449216

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This collection considers issues that have emerged in Early Modern Studies in the past fifteen years relating to understandings of mind and body in Shakespeare’s world. Informed by The Body in Parts, the essays in this book respond also to the notion of an early modern ‘body-mind’ in which Shakespeare and his contemporaries are understood in terms of bodily parts and cognitive processes. What might the impact of such understandings be on our picture of Shakespeare’s theatre or on our histories of the early modern period, broadly speaking? This book provides a wide range of approaches to this challenge, covering histories of cognition, studies of early modern stage practices, textual studies, and historical phenomenology, as well as new cultural histories by some of the key proponents of this approach at the present time. Because of the breadth of material covered, full weight is given to issues that are hotly debated at the present time within Shakespeare Studies: presentist scholarship is presented alongside more historically-focused studies, for example, and phenomenological studies of material culture are included along with close readings of texts. What the contributors have in common is a refusal to read the work of Shakespeare and his contemporaries either psychologically or materially; instead, these essays address a willingness to study early modern phenomena (like the Elizabethan stage) as manifesting an early modern belief in the embodiment of cognition.