<p><strong>'The chapters treat individual plays and are insightful and convincing throughout, but of particular interest are Martin's interpretations of <em>Dido, Queene of Carthage</em> and <em>The Massacre at Paris</em>, the two least-studied of Marlowe's plays...Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.'</strong> - <em>B. E. Brandt, South Dakota State University, CHOICE</em></p><p><strong>"Martin offers challenging readings that rethink Marlowe’s plays. His pervasive use of psychoanalysis should also renew the importance of this literary tool. <i>Tragedy and Trauma in the Plays of Christopher Marlowe </i></strong><strong>will appeal to undergraduates and academics studying these disciplines."</strong> – <em>Frank Swannack, University of Salford, UK</em></p>
Introduction: Tragedy and Trauma
1 Trauma, Faith, and Epic History in Dido, Queen of Carthage
2 Trauma and Tragedy in Tamburlaine the Great Part One
3 Tamburlaine the Great Part Two and the Refusal of Tragedy
4 Tragedy and Psychopathology in The Jew of Malta
5 Pain, History, and Theater in Edward II
6 The Traumatic Realism of The Massacre at Paris
7 Doctor Faustus and the Fundamental Fantasy