This edited collection of essays brings together leading scholars of early modern drama and playhouse culture to reflect upon the study of playing and playgoing in early modern England. With a particular focus on the player-playgoer exchange as a site of dramatic meaning-making, this book offers a timely and significant critical intervention in the field of Shakespeare and early modern drama. Working with and reflecting upon approaches drawn from literary scholarship, theatre history and performance studies, it seeks to advance the critical conversation on the interactions between: players; play-texts; performance spaces; the bodily, sensory and material experiences of the playhouse; and playgoers' responses to, and engagements with, the theatre. Through alternative methodological and theoretical approaches, previously unknown or overlooked evidence, and fresh questions asked of long-familiar materials, the volume offers a new account of early modern drama and performance that seeks to set the agenda for future research and scholarship.
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Introduction: Simon Smith and Emma Whipday; Part I. Players: Simon Smith and Emma Whipday; 1. Shakespeare's motists Natasha Korda; 2. 'Thou look'st pale': Narrating blanching and blushing on the early modern stage Emma Whipday; 3. Emotions, gesture and race in the early modern playhouse Farah Karim-Cooper; 4. The girl player, the virgin Mary and Romeo and Juliet Deanne Williams; Part II. Playgoers: Simon Smith and Emma Whipday; 5. Playgoing, apprenticeship and profit: Francis Quicksilver, Goldsmith and Richard Meighen, Stationer Lucy Munro; 6. Rethinking early modern playgoing, pleasure and judgement Simon Smith; 7. 'Art hath an enemie cal'd Ignorance': The prodigal industry of early modern playwrighting Jeremy Lopez; 8. Early modern drama out of order: Chronology, originality and audience expectations Eoin Price; Part III. Playhouses: Simon Smith and Emma Whipday; 9. 'Theatre' and 'Play+House': Naming spaces in the time of Shakespeare Tiffany Stern; 10. '[T]hough Ram Alley stinks with cooks and ale / Yet say there's many a worthy lawyer's chamber / Butts upon Ram Alley': An Innsman goes to the playhouse Jackie Watson; 11. Playing with the audience in Othello Stephen Purcell; 12. 'All their minds transfigured so together': The imagination at the Elizabethan playhouse Helen Hackett; Select Bibliography; Index.
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'Collectively the essays assembled by Smith and Whipday are creative and energetic, gesturing towards interesting new ways to explore the relationship between playing and playgoing that builds on and extends recent trends in the field.' David McInnis, Early Theatre
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Offers a new, interdisciplinary account of early modern drama through the lens of playing and playgoing.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781108733328
Publisert
2024-02-29
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge University Press
Vekt
448 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
17 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
306

Om bidragsyterne

Simon Smith is Associate Professor of Shakespeare and Early Modern Drama at the Shakespeare Institute, Stratford-upon-Avon and the Department of English Literature, University of Birmingham. He researches early modern drama, music and sensory culture. He is the author of Musical Response in the Early Modern Playhouse, 1603–1625 (Cambridge, 2017), for which he won the Shakespeare's Globe Book Award and the University English Book Prize. He edited Shakespeare/Sense (2020) and, with Jackie Watson and Amy Kenny, The Senses in Early Modern England, 1558–1660 (2015). He has acted as a historical music and theatre consultant to the RSC, Shakespeare's Globe, The Independent and the BBC adaptation of Wolf Hall. Emma Whipday is Lecturer in Renaissance Literature at Newcastle University. She researches domestic violence, gender and power, familial structures, and performance in and beyond the playhouse. Her monograph Shakespeare's Domestic Tragedies: Violence in the Early Modern Home (Cambridge, 2019) won the 2020 Shakespeare's Globe Book Award. She is currently working on a Leverhulme-funded book on brother-sister relationships on the early modern stage. Emma regularly directs 'practice as research' stagings of early modern texts. She also writes plays, including Shakespeare's Sister (2016) and The Defamation of Cicely Lee (2019), winner of the American Shakespeare Center's 'Shakespeare's New Contemporaries' award.