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Essays on aspects of early drama, including in this volume a focus
on the Towneley plays. Editors: Sarah Carpenter, Pamela M. King,
Meg Twycross, Greg Walker. Medieval English Theatre is the premier
journal in early theatre studies. Its name belies its wide range of
interest: it publishes articles on theatreand pageantry from across
the British Isles up to the opening of the London playhouses and
the suppression of the civic mystery cycles, and also includes
contributions on European and Latin drama, together with analyses
of modernsurvivals or equivalents, and of research productions of
medieval plays. This volume includes essays on spectatorship,
audience reception and records of early drama, especially in
Scotland, besides engaging with the current interest in the
Towneley Plays and the history of its manuscript.
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Textual Distortion (Hardcover)
Elaine Treharne, Greg Walker; Contributions by Aaron Kelly, Claude Willan, Dan Kim, …
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R1,132
Discovery Miles 11 320
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The notion of what it means to "distort" a text is here explored
through a rich variety of individual case studies. Distortion is
nearly always understood as negative. It can be defined as
perversion, impairment, caricature, corruption, misrepresentation,
or deviation. Unlike its close neighbour, "disruption", it remains
resolutely associatedwith the undesirable, the lost, or the
deceptive. Yet it is also part of a larger knowledge system,
filling the gap between the authentic event and its experience; it
has its own ethics and practice, and it is necessarily incorporated
in all meaningful communication. Need it always be a negative
phenomenon? How does distortion affect producers, transmitters and
receivers of texts? Are we always obliged to acknowledge
distortion? What effect does a distortive process have on the
intentionality, materiality and functionality, not to say the
cultural, intellectual and market value, of all textual objects?
The essays in this volume seek to address these questions,They
range fromthe medieval through the early modern to contemporary
periods and, throughout, deliberately challenge periodisation and
the canonical. Topics treated include Anglo-Saxon manuscripts,
Reformation documents and poems, Global Shakespeare, the Oxford
English Dictionary, Native American spiritual objects, and digital
tools for re-envisioning textual relationships. From the written to
the spoken, the inhabited object to the remediated, distortion is
demonstrated to demand a rich and provocative mode of analysis.
Elaine Treharne is Roberta Bowman Denning Professor of Humanities,
Professor of English, Director of the Centre for Spatial and
Textual Analysis, and Director of Stanford Technologies at Stanford
University; Greg Walker is Regius Professor of Rhetoric and English
Literature at the University of Edinburgh. Contributors: Matthew
Aiello, Emma Cayley, Aaron Kelly, Daeyeong (Dan) Kim, Sarah
Ogilvie, Timothy Powell, Giovanni Scorcioni, Greg Walker, Claude
Willan.
These essays of Sarah Carpenter have been selected to reflect her
career's close focus on the relationship of performance and
audience. They are drawn from the last 25 years of her writing, and
this has enabled the editors to organise them not chronologically
but rather to develop her central theme through a range of genres,
including morality plays, the interlude, court entertainments,
international political spectacle, and the public 'performances' of
natural and maintained fools. As a scholar who also has experience
of acting and of production, Carpenter is particularly sensitive to
the implications of location for creating meaning and generating
audience reaction. The essays are focused on a relatively short
time-span of 120 years, from the late fifteenth to the turn of the
seventeenth century, and thus nuance a period traditionally divided
between the late medieval and the early-modern, and between
Catholicism and Protestantism. Carpenter shows how the dynamics of
theatrical engagement in which the roles of audience and performer
are frequently mixed or even reversed offer a more creative route
to understanding how the individual and society respond to change.
(CS1090)
These essays of Sarah Carpenter have been selected to reflect her
career's close focus on the relationship of performance and
audience. They are drawn from the last 25 years of her writing, and
this has enabled the editors to organise them not chronologically
but rather to develop her central theme through a range of genres,
including morality plays, the interlude, court entertainments,
international political spectacle, and the public 'performances' of
natural and maintained fools. As a scholar who also has experience
of acting and of production, Carpenter is particularly sensitive to
the implications of location for creating meaning and generating
audience reaction. The essays are focused on a relatively short
time-span of 120 years, from the late fifteenth to the turn of the
seventeenth century, and thus nuance a period traditionally divided
between the late medieval and the early-modern, and between
Catholicism and Protestantism. Carpenter shows how the dynamics of
theatrical engagement in which the roles of audience and performer
are frequently mixed or even reversed offer a more creative route
to understanding how the individual and society respond to change.
(CS1090)
The Oxford Handbook to Tudor Drama is the authoritative secondary
text on Tudor drama. It both integrates recent important research
across different disciplines and periods and sets a new agenda for
the future study of Tudor drama, questioning a number of the
central assumptions of previous studies. Balancing the interests
and concerns of scholars in theatre history, drama, and literary
studies, its scope reflects the broad reach of Tudor drama as a
subject, inviting readers to see the Tudor century as a whole,
rather than made up of artificial and misleading divisions between
'medieval' and 'renaissance', religious and secular, pre- and
post-Shakespeare. The contributors, both the established leaders in
their fields and the brightest young scholars, attend to the
contexts, intellectual, theatrical and historical within which
drama was written, produced and staged in this period, and ask us
to consider afresh this most vital and complex of periods in
theatre history. The book is divided into four sections: Religious
Drama; Interludes and Comedies, Entertainments, Masques, and Royal
Entries; and Histories and political dramas.
Writing Under Tyranny: English Literature and the Henrician
Reformation spans the boundaries between literary studies and
history. It looks at the impact of tyrannical government on the
work of poets, playwrights, and prose writers of the early English
Renaissance. It shows the profound effects that political
oppression had on the literary production of the years from 1528 to
1547, and how English writers in turn strove to mitigate, redirect,
and finally resist that oppression. The result was the destruction
of a number of forms that had dominated the literary production of
late-medieval England, but also the creation of new forms that were
to dominate the writing of the following centuries. Paradoxically,
the tyranny of Henry VIII gave birth to many modes of writing now
seen to be characteristic of the English literary Renaissance.
A detailed study of the interaction between drama and politics in
the reign of Henry VIII. The subject is addressed both in general
terms and through a series of case-studies of individual early
Tudor plays. Through its innovative use of dramatic texts as
historical source material, the book provides illuminating insights
into the political and cultural history of the Henrician period,
and into the perceived character of the King himself. It focuses on
the troubled religious and political history of the reign, the
culture of the Court, and the personality and governmental style of
its head. In doing so the book argues for a reassessment of the
reign, which places the King once more at the centre of affairs,
and acknowledges the determining effect which this egotistical,
charismatic but, above all, pragmatic monarch exercised on the
artistic culture, as much as on the politics, of the Court. The
book also demonstrates the close and specific links between the
drama and the politics of the reign, through a detailed study of a
number of key works, links which have hitherto been viewed only as
general or peripheral.
Greg Walker provides a new account of the relationship between
politics and drama in the turbulent period from the accession of
Henry VIII to the reign of Elizabeth I. Building upon ideas first
developed in Plays of Persuasion (1991), he focuses on political
drama in both England and Scotland, exploring the complex
relationships between politics, court culture and dramatic
composition, performance and publication. Through a detailed
analysis of one central dramatic form, the interlude or great hall
play, and close study of key texts, Walker examines drama produced
and adapted for varying conditions of performance: indoor and
outdoor, private and public. He examines what happened when the
play script was printed and sold commercially as a literary
commodity. This interdisciplinary analysis will find a market among
Tudor historians as well as students of medieval and Renaissance
drama.
The series of satirical poems and invectives written against Thomas, Cardinal Wolsey, the chief minister of Henry VIII, by the poet John Skelton has long been used by scholars as evidence of the sins and follies of Wolsey’s regime. Yet the poems have never undergone serious political analysis. At the heart of this book is a detailed examination of these texts which aims to rectify that omission. For the first time they are subjected to a close reading which both elucidates their major themes and purpose, and sets them firmly in their political context. The book questions the orthodoxies of previous scholarship and challenges received opinions concerning the poet’s status at the court of Henry VIII, his employment by the noble house of Howard, and his motives for launching the satirical assault upon Wolsey. From this analysis emerges a very different Skelton to that provided by earlier accounts.
Greg Walker provides a new account of the relationship between politics and drama in the turbulent period from the accession of Henry VIII to the reign of Elizabeth I. Building on ideas first developed in Plays of Persuasion (1991), he focuses on political drama in both England and Scotland, exploring the complex relationships among politics, court culture and dramatic composition, performance and publication. This interdisciplinary analysis will find a market among Tudor historians as well as students of medieval and Renaissance drama.
John Heywood was an important literary and theatrical pioneer in
his own right, but he is also a revealing lens through which to
view the wider tumultuous history of the sixteenth century. He was,
through the period from the mid-1520s to the 1560s, as near to a
celebrity as Tudor England possessed, famed for his 'merry' persona
and good humour. But his public image concealed a deeper engagement
with religious and political history. Enduringly resistant to
extremism, he variously entertained, counselled, and cautioned his
readers and audiences through four reigns, finding himself, as
regimes changed and religious policies shifted, successively
celebrated, marginalised, anathematised, condemned to death,
recuperated, and celebrated once more before finally retreating
into exile on the Continent in 1564. He produced plays at the
courts of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth, performed and
taught keyboard music, wrote lyric poetry and songs, and from the
mid-sixteenth century turned to collecting and publishing highly
successful volumes of proverbs and epigrams for which he was
remembered well into the seventeenth century. Each of these works
provides a subtle, often courageously critical engagement with the
politics of its moment. To study Heywood's career takes us beyond
the cliches of popular history, beyond Shakespeare and the
Elizabethan playhouses, beyond the canonical Henrician court poets
and the writers of the Elizabethan 'Golden Age', beyond even the
experiences of the century's chief ministers, intellectuals, and
martyrs, to a theatrical and literary world less visible in the
conventional sources. It opens a window on a culture in which the
actions of monarchs, their councillors, and their victims were
witnessed and reflected upon at one remove from the centres of
power. And it allows us to re-examine the significance of an
individual who deserves our attention, not only for his
considerable artistic achievements, but also for the determination
with which, often against the odds, he used his talents in pursuit
of wider humanist cultural principles for over half a century.
This anthology is the sister volume to The Oxford Handbook of Tudor
Drama. It contains sixteen of the most important, innovative, and
dramatically exciting plays from the long Tudor century (1485-1603)
newly edited in accessible modern spelling from original
manuscripts or printed texts. Unlike previous anthologies, which
have tended to divide the period by selecting examples of only
'medieval' or 'Renaissance' drama, and so eliding the continuities
between the two, this volume gives readers an overview of the whole
period. For in reality 'medieval' plays such as the magnificent
York mystery cycle and the interludes of John Heywood were being
performed through much of the sixteenth century, alongside
'Renaissance' works such as the comedy Gammer Gurton's Needle and
Jasper Heywood's English re-imagining of Seneca's tragedy of blood,
Thyestes. Tudor audiences clearly did not share the assumptions of
modern editors, who have seen the plays produced before the 1590s
as 'primitive', didactic stuff, soon swept away by the genius of
Marlowe and Shakespeare. They enjoyed all of the works printed
here, some anthologised in a readily available collection for the
first time, seeing in each of them elements of dramatic action,
character, and emotional engagement that moved and entertained
them. This anthology will allow modern readers to see why, offering
a chronological arrangement of the best Tudor plays that allows
them to see for themselves the ways in which the traditions and
tropes that would characterise the Shakespearean stage were tried
and tested through a century of innovation and experiment. With the
riches of a century of Tudor drama before them in a single volume,
readers and performers will be able to judge both what was gained
in the long century from the 1480s to the 1600s and also what was
lost as drama moved from the streets and halls of the early Tudor
period to the professional playhouses of the Elizabethan age.
This anthology is the sister volume to The Oxford Handbook of Tudor
Drama. It contains sixteen of the most important, innovative, and
dramatically exciting plays from the long Tudor century (1485-1603)
newly edited in accessible modern spelling from original
manuscripts or printed texts. Unlike previous anthologies, which
have tended to divide the period by selecting examples of only
'medieval' or 'Renaissance' drama, and so eliding the continuities
between the two, this volume gives readers an overview of the whole
period. For in reality 'medieval' plays such as the magnificent
York mystery cycle and the interludes of John Heywood were being
performed through much of the sixteenth century, alongside
'Renaissance' works such as the comedy Gammer Gurton's Needle and
Jasper Heywood's English re-imagining of Seneca's tragedy of blood,
Thyestes. Tudor audiences clearly did not share the assumptions of
modern editors, who have seen the plays produced before the 1590s
as 'primitive', didactic stuff, soon swept away by the genius of
Marlowe and Shakespeare. They enjoyed all of the works printed
here, some anthologised in a readily available collection for the
first time, seeing in each of them elements of dramatic action,
character, and emotional engagement that moved and entertained
them. This anthology will allow modern readers to see why, offering
a chronological arrangement of the best Tudor plays that allows
them to see for themselves the ways in which the traditions and
tropes that would characterise the Shakespearean stage were tried
and tested through a century of innovation and experiment. With the
riches of a century of Tudor drama before them in a single volume,
readers and performers will be able to judge both what was gained
in the long century from the 1480s to the 1600s and also what was
lost as drama moved from the streets and halls of the early Tudor
period to the professional playhouses of the Elizabethan age.
The study of medieval literature has experienced a revolution in
the last two decades, which has reinvigorated many parts of the
discipline and changed the shape of the subject in relation to the
scholarship of the previous generation. 'New' texts (laws and
penitentials, women's writing, drama records), innovative fields
and objects of study (the history of the book, the study of space
and the body, medieval masculinities), and original ways of
studying them (the Sociology of the Text, performance studies) have
emerged. This has brought fresh vigour and impetus to medieval
studies, and impacted significantly on cognate periods and areas.
The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Literature in English brings
together the insights of these new fields and approaches with those
of more familiar texts and methods of study, to provide a
comprehensive overview of the state of medieval literature today.
It also returns to first principles in posing fundamental questions
about the nature, scope, and significance of the discipline, and
the directions that it might take in the next decade. The Handbook
contains 44 newly commissioned essays from both world-leading
scholars and exciting new scholarly voices. Topics covered range
from the canonical genres of Saints' lives, sermons, romance, lyric
poetry, and heroic poetry; major themes including monstrosity and
marginality, patronage and literary politics, manuscript studies
and vernacularity are investigated; and there are close readings of
key texts, such as Beowulf, Wulf and Eadwacer, and Ancrene Wisse
and key authors from AElfric to Geoffrey Chaucer, Langland, and the
Gawain Poet.
The Oxford Handbook to Tudor Drama is the authoritative secondary
text on Tudor drama. It both integrates recent important research
across different disciplines and periods and sets a new agenda for
the future study of Tudor drama, questioning a number of the
central assumptions of previous studies. Balancing the interests
and concerns of scholars in theatre history, drama, and literary
studies, its scope reflects the broad reach of Tudor drama as a
subject, inviting readers to see the Tudor century as a whole,
rather than made up of artificial and misleading divisions between
'medieval' and 'renaissance', religious and secular, pre- and
post-Shakespeare. The contributors, both the established leaders in
their fields and the brightest young scholars, attend to the
contexts, intellectual, theatrical and historical within which
drama was written, produced and staged in this period, and ask us
to consider afresh this most vital and complex of periods in
theatre history. The book is divided into four sections: Religious
Drama; Interludes and Comedies, Entertainments, Masques, and Royal
Entries; and Histories and political dramas.
Writing Under Tyranny: English Literature and the Henrician
Reformation spans the boundaries between literary studies and
history. It looks at the impact of tyrannical government on the
work of poets, playwrights, and prose writers of the early English
Renaissance. It shows the profound effects that political
oppression had on the literary production of the years from 1528 to
1547, and how English writers in turn strove to mitigate, redirect,
and finally resist that oppression. The result was the destruction
of a number of forms that had dominated the literary production of
late-medieval England, but also the creation of new forms that were
to dominate the writing of the following centuries. Paradoxically,
the tyranny of Henry VIII gave birth to many modes of writing now
seen to be characteristic of the English literary Renaissance.
Oxford Textual Perspectives is a new series of informative and
provocative studies focused upon literary texts (conceived of in
the broadest sense of that term) and the technologies, cultures and
communities that produce, inform, and receive them. It provides
fresh interpretations of fundamental works and of the vital and
challenging issues emerging in English literary studies. By
engaging with the materiality of the literary text, its production,
and reception history, and frequently testing and exploring the
boundaries of the notion of text itself, the volumes in the series
question familiar frameworks and provide innovative interpretations
of both canonical and less well-known works. Imagining
Spectatorship offers a new discussion of how spectators witnessed
early drama in the various spaces and places in which those works
were performed. It combines broad historical and theoretical
reflection with closely analysed case studies to produce a
comprehensive account of the ways in which individuals encountered
early drama, how they were cued to respond to it, and how we might
think about those issues today. It addresses the practical matters
that conditioned spectatorship, principally those concerned with
the location and configuration of the spaces in which a performance
occurred, but also suggests how these factors intersected with
social status, gender, religious commitment and affiliation,
degrees of real or felt personal agency, and the operation of the
cognitive processes themselves. It considers both real witnesses
and those 'imagined' spectators which are seemingly figured by both
dramatic and quasi-dramatic works, and whose assumed attitudes
play-makers sought to second-guess. It also looks at the
spectatorial experience itself as a subject of representation in a
number of early texts. Finally, it examines the complex contract
entered into by audiences and players for the duration of a
performance, looking at how texts cued spectators to respond to
specific dramaturgical tropes and gambits and how audience response
was itself a cause of potential anxiety for writers. The book
resists the conventional divide between 'medieval' and
'early-modern' drama, using its focus on the spectators' experience
to point connections and continuities across a diverse range of
genres, such as processions and tourneys as well as scripted plays,
pageants, and interludes; a variety of different venues, such as
city streets, great halls, and playhouses, and a period of about
150 years to the Shakespearean stage of the 1590s and 1600s. It
seeks to offer routes by which inferences about early spectatorship
can be made despite the relative absence of personal testimony from
the period.
Oxford Textual Perspectives is a new series of informative and
provocative studies focused upon literary texts (conceived of in
the broadest sense of that term) and the technologies, cultures and
communities that produce, inform, and receive them. It provides
fresh interpretations of fundamental works and of the vital and
challenging issues emerging in English literary studies. By
engaging with the materiality of the literary text, its production,
and reception history, and frequently testing and exploring the
boundaries of the notion of text itself, the volumes in the series
question familiar frameworks and provide innovative interpretations
of both canonical and less well-known works. Imagining
Spectatorship offers a new discussion of how spectators witnessed
early drama in the various spaces and places in which those works
were performed. It combines broad historical and theoretical
reflection with closely analysed case studies to produce a
comprehensive account of the ways in which individuals encountered
early drama, how they were cued to respond to it, and how we might
think about those issues today. It addresses the practical matters
that conditioned spectatorship, principally those concerned with
the location and configuration of the spaces in which a performance
occurred, but also suggests how these factors intersected with
social status, gender, religious commitment and affiliation,
degrees of real or felt personal agency, and the operation of the
cognitive processes themselves. It considers both real witnesses
and those 'imagined' spectators which are seemingly figured by both
dramatic and quasi-dramatic works, and whose assumed attitudes
play-makers sought to second-guess. It also looks at the
spectatorial experience itself as a subject of representation in a
number of early texts. Finally, it examines the complex contract
entered into by audiences and players for the duration of a
performance, looking at how texts cued spectators to respond to
specific dramaturgical tropes and gambits and how audience response
was itself a cause of potential anxiety for writers. The book
resists the conventional divide between 'medieval' and
'early-modern' drama, using its focus on the spectators' experience
to point connections and continuities across a diverse range of
genres, such as processions and tourneys as well as scripted plays,
pageants, and interludes; a variety of different venues, such as
city streets, great halls, and playhouses, and a period of about
150 years to the Shakespearean stage of the 1590s and 1600s. It
seeks to offer routes by which inferences about early spectatorship
can be made despite the relative absence of personal testimony from
the period.
Essays on aspects of early drama. Medieval English Theatre is the
premier journal in early theatre studies. Its name belies its wide
range of interest: it publishes articles on theatre and pageantry
from across the British Isles up to the opening of the London
playhouses and the suppression of the civic mystery cycles, and
also includes contributions on European and Latin drama, together
with analyses of modern survivals or equivalents, and of research
productions of medieval plays. This volume comprises the second
half of the Festschrift presented to John J. McGavin (of which
volume 27 is the first); its essays reflect and honour many of his
interests. The subjects addressed include ceremonial (a coronation
and a grand funeral), audience reception and spectatorship of many
kinds, Welsh drama, the role of women in the production of libels,
and the structure of didactic dialogue plays. A special addition is
the late David Mills'last essay, on the Abraham Sacrifiant of
Theodore Beze. Contributors: Mishtooni Bose, Elisabeth Dutton,
Alice Hunt, Pamela M. King, David N. Klausner, David Mills, Sue
Niebrzydowski, Nadia Therese van Pelt, Charlotte Steenbrugge, Eila
Williamson
The study of medieval literature has experienced a revolution in
the last two decades, which has reinvigorated many parts of the
discipline and changed the shape of the subject in relation to the
scholarship of the previous generation. 'New' texts (laws and
penitentials, women's writing, drama records), innovative fields
and objects of study (the history of the book, the study of space
and the body, medieval masculinities), and original ways of
studying them (the Sociology of the Text, performance studies) have
emerged. This has brought fresh vigour and impetus to medieval
studies, and impacted significantly on cognate periods and areas.
The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Literature in English brings
together the insights of these new fields and approaches with those
of more familiar texts and methods of study, to provide a
comprehensive overview of the state of medieval literature today.
It also returns to first principles in posing fundamental questions
about the nature, scope, and significance of the discipline, and
the directions that it might take in the next decade.
The Handbook contains 35 newly commissioned essays from both
world-leading scholars and exciting new scholarly voices. Topics
covered range from the canonical genres of Saints' lives, sermons,
romance, lyric poetry, and heroic poetry; major themes including
monstrosity and marginality, patronage and literary politics,
manuscript studies and vernacularity are investigated; and there
are close readings of key texts, such as Beowulf, Wulf and
Eadwacer, and Ancrene Wisse and key authors from AElfric to
Geoffrey Chaucer, Langland, and the Gawain Poet.
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