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Cheshire - Including Chester: 1 (Hardcover): David Mills, Lawrence M. Clopper, Elizabeth Baldwin Cheshire - Including Chester: 1 (Hardcover)
David Mills, Lawrence M. Clopper, Elizabeth Baldwin
R1,211 Discovery Miles 12 110 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
The Performance of Middle English Culture - Essays on Chaucer and the Drama in Honor of Martin Stevens (Hardcover): James J.... The Performance of Middle English Culture - Essays on Chaucer and the Drama in Honor of Martin Stevens (Hardcover)
James J. Paxson, Lawrence M. Clopper, Sylvia Tomasch; Contributions by Alfred David, James J. Paxson, …
R1,893 Discovery Miles 18 930 Out of stock

First detailed examination of theatricality in Chaucer and in Middle English literature and culture as a whole. Theatricality as a cultural process is vitally important in the middle ages; it encompasses not only the thematic importation of dramatic images into the Canterbury Tales, but also the social and ideological `performativities' of the mystery and morality plays, metadramatic investments, and the ludic energies of Chaucerian discourses in general. The twelve essays collected here address for the first time this intersection, using contemporary theoryand historical scholarship to treat a number of important critical problems, including the anthropology of theatrical performance; gender; allegory; Chaucerian metapoetics; intertextual play and jouissance; social mediationand rhetoric; genre; and the institutionality of medieval studies. JAMES J. PAXSON is Associate Professor of English at the University of Florida; LAWRENCE M. CLOPPER is Professor of English at Indiana University; SYLVIA TOMASCHis Associate Professor of English at Hunter College, City University of New York. Contributors: KATHLEEN ASHLEY, MARLENE CLARK, RICHARD DANIELS, ALFRED DAVID, RICHARD K. EMMERSON, JOHN GANIM, WARREN GINSBERG, ROBERT W. HANNING, SHARON KRAUS, SETH LERER, WILLIAM MCLELLAN, PAMELA SHEINGORN, PETER W. TRAVIS

Cheshire - Including Chester: 1 (Paperback): David Mills, Lawrence M. Clopper, Elizabeth Baldwin Cheshire - Including Chester: 1 (Paperback)
David Mills, Lawrence M. Clopper, Elizabeth Baldwin
R957 Discovery Miles 9 570 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Drama, Play, and Game (Hardcover, 2nd ed.): Lawrence M. Clopper Drama, Play, and Game (Hardcover, 2nd ed.)
Lawrence M. Clopper
R2,016 Discovery Miles 20 160 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

How was it possible for drama, especially biblical representations, to appear in the Christian West given the church's condemnation of the "theatrum" of the ancient world? In a book with radical implications for the study of medieval literature, Lawrence Clopper resolves this perplexing question.
"Drama, Play, and Game" demonstrates that the "theatrum" repudiated by medieval clerics was not "theater" as we understand the term today. Clopper contends that critics have misrepresented Western stage history because they have assumed that "theatrum" designates a place where drama is performed. While "theatrum" was thought of as a site of spectacle during the Middle Ages, the term was more closely connected with immodest behavior and lurid forms of festive culture. Clerics were not opposed to liturgical representations in churches, but they strove ardently to suppress May games," ludi," festivals, and liturgical parodies. Medieval drama, then, stemmed from a more vernacular tradition than previously acknowledged-one developed by England's laity outside the boundaries of clerical rule.
"Drama, Play, and Game" also explores the antitheatrical milieu in which this tradition developed. Clopper reads the" Tretise of Miraclis Pleyinge"-thought to be the only sustained attack on theater between late antiquity and the Puritan period-as an assault not on religious drama but on various forms of "ludi inhonesti," He then argues that "ludi" varied widely in England depending on the participants' clerical or lay status and on where the "ludi" were performed. Clopper provides profiles of ludic practices in a variety of venues: monasteries and churches, aristocratic houses, cities and towns, parishes, and the countryside.
Moving from consideration of why dramas developed in some cities and towns and not others, Clopper considers finally the "matter" of surviving plays-the kind of information that gets into them and the anxieties they display-and questions whose interests the plays represented. He argues ultimately that clerical indifference and growing distaste for vernacular drama engendered a reaction from lay people who institutionalized themselves in guilds to assert their own political power, flaunt the prestige of urban life, and take advantage of new commercial opportunities.

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