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John Lyly's Euphues: The Anatomy of Wit and Euphues and his
England, created a literary sensation in their own age, and had a
profound influence on Elizabethan prose. This modern-spelling
edition of the two works, the first for nearly a century, is
designed to allow the twenty-first century reader access to this
culturally significant text and to explore the fascination that it
exerted. Attuned to the needs of both students and specialists, the
text is edited from the earliest complete witnesses, is richly
annotated, and facilitates an understanding of Lyly's narrative
technique by distinguishing typographically between narrative
levels. The introduction explores the relationship between the
dramatic and non-dramatic work, locating Lyly's highly influential
plays in a wider context and Euphues' Latin poem in praise of
Elizabeth I, translated for the first time, is discussed in an
Appendix. A work of primary importance for students of Renaissance
prose, this edition complements the on-going publication of Lyly's
dramatic works in The Revels Plays. -- .
Designed to introduce the student or general reader to a largely
unfamiliar area of Elizabethan theatrical activity, Five
Elizabethan progress entertainments focuses on a group of
entertainments mounted for the monarch in the closing years of her
reign. Richly annotated, and prefaced by a substantial
introduction, the texts enable an understanding of the motives
underlying not only the progress itself, but the choice of
locations the monarch elected to visit and the personal and
political preoccupations of those with whom she determined to stay.
Selected for their diversity, the entertainments exhibit the
tensions underlying some royal visits, the lavish expenditure
entailed for the monarch's hosts and the overlap in terms of both
material and authorship between the progress entertainments and the
more widely studied products of the sixteenth-century stage. -- .
Preface - Acknowledgements - Verse and Prose - Imagery and
Spectacle - Shakespeare's Expositions - Plays within Plays -
Parallel Actions - The Treatment of Character - The Use of the
Soliloquy - Art and Artifice - Conclusion: Discovering
Shakespeare's Meaning - Index
First performed in the 1580s, Love's Metamorphosis is widely
regarded as the most elegantly structured of Lyly's plays. The plot
looks back to the account of Erisichthon's punishment for the
desecration of Ceres' grove in Ovid's Metamorphosis, but the
Ovidian story is woven into a wider network of interests turning
upon aspects of love. A series of allusions to earlier Lylian
compositions allows the play to be viewed in terms of a continuum
of work, exploring the status of Cupid and the nature and extent of
his power. The play is notable for the articulate resistance
offered by the female characters towards the desires of their
lovers and the wishes of authority figures, while Protea, is of
particular interest to feminist criticism as a striking example of
a woman empowered rather than marginalised by the loss of her
virgin state. Revived towards the close of the sixteenth century,
the play is of importance to theatre historians in that it is the
only one of Lyly's comedies known to have passed from Paul's to a
different troupe. It is newly edited here from the sole early
witness, the quarto of 1601. -- .
"This thoroughly annotated volume provides a detailed study of the
play's sources. " Patrick Richards, Day by Day His last known work
and the only one to be written primarily in verse, The Woman in the
Moon is among Lyly's most entertaining plays. Turning upon the
construction of the female character, it has been read as highly
misogynistic, and as a sixteenth-century feminist manifesto. The
biblical version of the creation of woman is overturned in the
first scene when the play's supreme deity, Nature, presents her
ultimate creation, Pandora (memorably played in 1928 by Katharine
Hepburn), to a group of Utopian shepherds, who compete for her
love. Their amatory pursuit is complicated by the seven planets,
whose attributes have been bestowed by Nature on her new creation,
and who decide to take revenge by subjecting Pandora to their
influence. The action rapidly develops into a dazzling comedy of
intrigue, resulting in both an explanation for the female
disposition and the creation of an 'alternative' version of the
myth of the man in the moon. Newly edited from the first edition
(1597), The Woman in the Moon will be of interest to all students
of sixteenth-century drama. It is complemented by generous notes
and commentary, as well as a full introduction and stage history.
In this useful guide, Leah Scragg indicates some of the ways in
which meaning is generated in Shakespearian drama and the kinds of
approaches that might lead to a fuller understanding of the plays.
Each chapter focuses on one aspect of the dramatic composition,
such as verse and prose, imagery and spectacle, and the use of
soliloquy, and explores how this contributes to the overall
meaning. Written in a clear and helpful style, Discovering
Shakespearian Meaning enables students to discover the meaning for
themselves.
A knowledge of the history and evolution of the tales on which
Shakespeare drew in the composition of his plays is essential for
the understanding of his work. In re-telling a particular story, a
Renaissance writer was not simply reshaping the structure of the
narrative but participating in a species of debate with earlier
writers and the meanings their tales had accrued. The stories upon
which Shakespeare's plays are constructed did not descend to him as
innocent collections of incidents, but brought with them
considerable cultural baggage, substantially lost to the modern
spectator but an essential component, for a contemporary audience,
of the meaning of the work.Shakespeare's Alternative Tales explores
this literary dialogue, focusing on those plays in which the
expectations generated by an inherited story are in some way
overthrown, setting up a tension for a Renaissance spectator
between 'received' and 'alternative' readings of the text. Each
chapter opens with a familiar story, supplying a context for the
subsequent discussion, and exhibits the way in which the
dramatist's reworking of a traditional motif interrogates the
assumptions implicit in his source.While offering the
twentieth-century reader a fresh perspective from which to view the
plays, the approach also supplies an introduction to contemporary
readings of the Shakespearean canon. The tales Leah Scragg
considers may be seen as 'alternative' in more than one sense: they
radically rework conventional situations, while lending themselves
to analysis in terms of new critical methodologies.The text will be
of interest to both students of Shakespeare and the general reader.
In conjunction with the author's companion volume, Shakespeare's
Mouldy Tales, it provides an ideal introduction to contemporary
developments in source studies.
Designed to introduce the student or general reader to a largely
unfamiliar area of Elizabethan theatrical activity, Five
Elizabethan progress entertainments focuses on a group of
entertainments mounted for the monarch in the closing years of her
reign. Richly annotated, and prefaced by a substantial
introduction, the texts enable an understanding of the motives
underlying not only the progress itself, but the choice of
locations the monarch elected to visit and the personal and
political preoccupations of those with whom she determined to stay.
Selected for their diversity, the entertainments exhibit the
tensions underlying some royal visits, the lavish expenditure
entailed for the monarch's hosts and the overlap in terms of both
material and authorship between the progress entertainments and the
more widely studied products of the sixteenth-century stage. -- .
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Galatea (Paperback)
John Lyly; Edited by Leah Scragg
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R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Devised as an entertainment for a Tudor monarch, Galatea might
be seen, paradoxically, as a parable for our time. Inhabiting a
world engaged in a process of change, the characters find
themselves locked in a series of transgressive situations that
speak directly to contemporary experience and twenty-first-century
critical concerns. Same-sex relationships, shifts of authority, and
the destabilization of meaning all lend the play a surprising
modernity, making it at once the most accessible of Lyly's plays
and the one most frequently performed today.
Designed for the student reader, Leah Scragg's edition offers a
range of perspectives on the work. An extensive introduction
locates the play in the context of the Elizabethan court, opening a
window onto a kind of drama very different from that of more
familiar sixteenth-century writers, such as Marlowe and
Shakespeare. The latter's indebtedness to the play is fully
documented, while detailed critical and performance histories allow
an insight into the work's susceptibility to reinterpretation.
The first fully annotated, modern-spelling edition of Lyly's Pap
with an Hatchet, this volume in the Revels Plays Companion Library
series opens a window on the most neglected item in the Lylian
canon. A response to a series of late sixteenth-century
anti-episcopalian pamphlets issued under the pseudonym 'Martin
Marprelate', Pap with an Hatchet seeks to beat Martin at his own
game, employing all the devices deployed in the tracts to deride
and subvert the Martinist position. Written in a racy, colloquial
style, and at variance in its format with twenty-first century
printing conventions, the pamphlet has remained difficult to access
for the modern reader, and it is this barrier to a fuller
understanding that the present edition has been designed to
overcome. Re-edited from the earliest witnesses, brought into line
with contemporary printing practice, richly annotated, and equipped
with a substantial introduction, it enables a new insight into the
witty interaction between the work and the Martinist tracts, the
care underlying its composition, and the relish that Lyly brought
to his task. -- .
Mother Bombie is unique among Lyly's comedies in its urban setting
and focus upon middle and lower class concerns. The play turns on
the tissue of misconceptions surrounding the efforts of four
fathers to secure socially advantageous marriages for their heirs,
and the determination of their young servants to exploit their
masters' misguided aspirations for their own advantage. A
theatrical success in its own day, the play is of particular
interest to twenty-first century criticism for its focus upon those
situated on the margins of the social group, notably Mother Bombie
herself, thought by some to be a witch, and the two simpletons
whose marital prospects lie at the heart of the action. This fully
annotated, modern-spelling edition of the play, now available in
paperback, is re-edited from the earliest witnesses; the quartos of
1594 and 1598, and incorporates the songs first published by Blount
in his collected edition of Lyly's works in 1632 -- .
In this useful guide, Leah Scragg indicates some of the ways in
which meaning is generated in Shakespearian drama and the kinds of
approaches that might lead to a fuller understanding of the plays.
Each chapter focuses on one aspect of the dramatic composition,
such as verse and prose, imagery and spectacle, and the use of
soliloquy, and explores how this contributes to the overall
meaning. Written in a clear and helpful style, Discovering
Shakespearian Meaning enables students to discover the meaning for
themselves.
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