Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England, Band 11John Pitcher Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1999 - 400 Seiten This volume, published annually, contains essays by critics and cultural historians, as well as reviews of the many books and essays dealing with the cultural history of medieval and early modern England as expressed by and realised in its drama. |
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Seite 35
... Lord Chamberlain's censoring powers , as well , the au- thorities placed many constraints on dramatic texts — these regula- tions strike us now as overly stringent , even silly , but they were thought by many contemporary respondents to ...
... Lord Chamberlain's censoring powers , as well , the au- thorities placed many constraints on dramatic texts — these regula- tions strike us now as overly stringent , even silly , but they were thought by many contemporary respondents to ...
Seite 36
... Lord Mayor , while keeping within reach of their city patrons , the play- ers erected their theaters just outside his jurisdiction . 5 It is ironic that Gildersleeve was the scholar who first questioned the date of this " 1574 " order ...
... Lord Mayor , while keeping within reach of their city patrons , the play- ers erected their theaters just outside his jurisdiction . 5 It is ironic that Gildersleeve was the scholar who first questioned the date of this " 1574 " order ...
Seite 38
... lord of a manor and derived to future owners through inheritance or sale . As royal grants , liberties could be limited or revoked by the crown . 15 " Liberty " , thus has a precise legal definition , but in London and elsewhere , the ...
... lord of a manor and derived to future owners through inheritance or sale . As royal grants , liberties could be limited or revoked by the crown . 15 " Liberty " , thus has a precise legal definition , but in London and elsewhere , the ...
Seite 39
... Lord Mayor and Aldermen did not exercise jurisdiction . An example was the liberty of the Steelyard merchants in Downgate ward , which had given foreign traders from the Hanseatic League the freedom to trade free of tolls ( this liberty ...
... Lord Mayor and Aldermen did not exercise jurisdiction . An example was the liberty of the Steelyard merchants in Downgate ward , which had given foreign traders from the Hanseatic League the freedom to trade free of tolls ( this liberty ...
Seite 40
... Lord Mayor " ; " the ceaseless hostility of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London " : or " a city that sought its prohibition . " John Brayne was the first entrepreneur to spend his money on a purpose - built theater space ...
... Lord Mayor " ; " the ceaseless hostility of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London " : or " a city that sought its prohibition . " John Brayne was the first entrepreneur to spend his money on a purpose - built theater space ...
Inhalt
19 | |
34 | |
Robert Wilsons The Three Ladies of London and the Alienation of the English | 60 |
Ethics and Courtly Pragmatism in Damon and Pithias | 88 |
Misdiagnosing Memorial Reconstruction in John of Bordeaux | 114 |
The Example of Thomas Kyd and The Spanish Tragedy | 129 |
Samuel Daniel and Italian Lyrical Drama | 143 |
Jonsons Epicoene and the Complex Plot | 172 |
The Moral Significance of Face Painting Conventions | 305 |
A Midsummer Nights Dream New Casebooks | 309 |
Shakespeare East and West | 316 |
The Shakespearian Playing Companies | 322 |
The Bad Quartos and Their Contexts | 333 |
Shakespeare and the End of Elizabethan England | 336 |
Shakespeare and the Cultural Politics of the Elizabethan Theatre | 344 |
Shakespeare Aphra Behn and the Canon Approaching Literature | 352 |
Heraldry Inheritance and National Households in Jonsons The New Inn | 226 |
Lusts Dominion and Oliver Cromwell | 264 |
Writing for Performance | 277 |
Shakespeare Theory and Performance | 280 |
The Critical Tradition Shakespeare The Critical Tradition | 287 |
Representations of Poverty in the Age of Shakespeare | 294 |
Stage and Sermon in Renaissance England | 298 |
What Was Shakespeare? Renaissance Plays and Changing Critical Practice | 358 |
Questions of Evidence | 363 |
Shakespeare the Historian | 369 |
The Selected Proceedings of the International Shakespeare Association World Congress Tokyo 1991 | 377 |
Seizures of the Will in Early Modern English Drama | 383 |
Index | 391 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actors anagnôrisis Aphra Behn argues argument Aristippus Aristotle Aristotle's audience authorship Bacon and Friar Ben Jonson Cambridge Carisophus chapter characters Christian City claims comedy context court courtier courtly honesty critical Crockett cultural Daniel's discourse discovery early modern edition Elizabethan England English Epicoene essay Everyman evidence fact Frampul Friar Bacon Gerontus Goodstock Gurr Hamlet heraldic heraldic visitations Hieronimo Historicism identity Il pastor fido Irish issues Italian John of Bordeaux Jonson's King Kyd's liberties literary London Lord Mayor Lust's Dominion Mallin memorial reconstruction Mercadorus Midsummer Night's Dream moral Oxford pastoral Pechter performance peripeteia play play's players playhouses poem Poetics political production quarto Queen Anne's Men recognition reference Renaissance Renaissance Drama reveals Richard Samuel Daniel scene Shakespeare Shelee-nien social Spanish Tragedy stage suggests Tasso's textual theater theatrical Thomas Kyd Three Ladies tion tradition translation University Press Volpone Whigham writing
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 51 - As one who long in populous city pent, Where houses thick and sewers annoy the air, Forth issuing on a summer's morn, to breathe Among the pleasant villages and farms Adjoined, from each thing met conceives delight The smell of grain, or tedded grass, or kine, Or dairy, each rural sight, each rural sound...
Seite 243 - Call you that desperate, which, by a line Of institution, from our ancestors Hath been derived down to us, and received In a succession for the noblest way Of breeding up our youth, in letters, arms, Fair mien, discourses, civil exercise, And all the blazon of a gentleman ? Where can he learn to vault, to ride, to fence, To move his body gracefuller, to speak His language purer, or to tune his mind Or manners more to the harmony of nature, Than in these nurseries of nobility?
Seite 208 - ... tis so admirable that when it is done no one of the audience would think the poet could have missed it, and yet it was concealed so much before the last scene that any other way would sooner have entered into your thoughts.
Seite 158 - All our English writers, I mean such as are happy in the Italian, Will deign to steal out of this author, mainly: Almost as much as from Montagnie: He has so modern and facile a vein, Fitting the time, and catching the court-ear!
Seite 150 - Allor tra fiori e linfe Traean dolci carole Gli Amoretti senz'archi e senza faci; Sedean pastori e ninfe Meschiando a le parole Vezzi e susurri, ed ai susurri i baci Strettamente tenaci; La verginella ignude Scopria sue fresche rose, Ch'or tien nel velo ascose, E le poma del seno acerbe e crude; E spesso in fonte o in lago Scherzar si vide con l'amata il vago. Tu prima, Onor, velasti La fonte de i diletti, Negando l'onde a l'amorosa sete; Tu a...
Seite 137 - Ha, was't not so? You had a son too, He was my liege's nephew. He was proud, And politic. Had he lived, he might ha...
Seite 187 - As the feeling with which we startle at a shooting star compared with that of watching the sunrise at the pre-established moment, such and so low is surprise compared with expectation.
Seite 144 - I cannot but wonder at the strange presumption of some men, that dare so audaciously aduenture to introduce any whatsoeuer forraine wordes, be they neuer so strange, and of themselues, as it were, without a Parliament, without any consent or allowance, establish them as Free-denizens in our language.
Seite 167 - Soles occidere et redire possunt: nobis cum semel occidit brevis lux, nox est perpetua una dormienda.
Seite 137 - When in Tolledo there I studied It was my chance to write a Tragedie . . . Which long forgot, I found this other daie.