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A Monster with a Thousand Hands - The Discursive Spectator in Early Modern England (Hardcover)
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A Monster with a Thousand Hands - The Discursive Spectator in Early Modern England (Hardcover)
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A Monster with a Thousand Hands makes visible a figure that has
been largely overlooked in early modern scholarship on theater and
audiences: the discursive spectator, an entity distinct from the
actual bodies attending early modern English playhouses. Amy J.
Rodgers demonstrates how the English commercial theater's rapid
development and prosperity altered the lexicon for describing
theatergoers and the processes of engagement that the theater was
believed to cultivate. In turn, these changes influenced and
produced a cultural projection-the spectator-a figure generated by
social practices rather than a faithful recording of those who
attended the theater. The early modern discursive spectator did not
merely develop alongside the phenomenological one, but played as
significant a role in shaping early modern viewers and viewing
practices as did changes to staging technologies, exhibition
practices, and generic experimentation. While audience and film
studies have theorized the spectator, these fields tend to focus on
the role of twentieth-century media (film, television, and the
computer) in producing mass-culture viewers. Such emphases lead to
a misapprehension that the discursive spectator is modernity's
creature. Fearing anachronism, early modern scholars have preferred
demographic studies of audiences to theoretical engagements with
the "effects" of spectatorship. While demographic work provides an
invaluable snapshot, it cannot account for the ways that the
spectator is as much an idea as a material presence. And, while a
few studies pursue the dynamics that existed among author, text,
and audience using critical tools sharpened by film studies, they
tend to obscure how early modern culture understood the spectator.
Rather than relying exclusively on historical or theoretical
methodologies, A Monster with a Thousand Hands reframes
spectatorship as a subject of inquiry shaped both by changes in
entertainment technologies and the interaction of groups and
individuals with different forms of cultural production.
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