Theatre of the Book, 1480-1880: Print, Text, and Performance in EuropeOxford University Press, 2003 - 494 pages It shows that, far from being marginal to Renaissance dramatists, the printing press had an essential role to play in the birth of the modern theatre, crucially shaping the normative conception of theatre as a distinct aesthetic medium and of drama as a distinct narrative form, helping to forge a theatricalist aesthetics in opposition to 'the book'. Treating playtexts, engravings, actor portraits, notation systems, and theatrical ephemera at once as material objects and expressions of complex cultural formations, Theatre of the Book examines the European theatre's resistance to and continual refashioning of itself in the world of print."--Jacket. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 89
Page vii
... Stage Texts , 1760-1880 THEATRE IMPRIMATUR 4. Reinventing " Theatre " via the Printing Press 5. Critical Law , Theatrical Licence 6. Accurate Texts , Authoritative Editions 93 113 129 THE SENSES OF MEDIA 7. The Sense of the Senses ...
... Stage Texts , 1760-1880 THEATRE IMPRIMATUR 4. Reinventing " Theatre " via the Printing Press 5. Critical Law , Theatrical Licence 6. Accurate Texts , Authoritative Editions 93 113 129 THE SENSES OF MEDIA 7. The Sense of the Senses ...
Page 2
... stage - to understand that thing called " theatre . " The chapters that follow offer an account of the entangled histories of print and the modern stage , addressing the meaning of this relationship for the theatre itself and for the ...
... stage - to understand that thing called " theatre . " The chapters that follow offer an account of the entangled histories of print and the modern stage , addressing the meaning of this relationship for the theatre itself and for the ...
Page 5
... stage and the early stage kept aloof from the press . But nearly a century before Shakespeare was born , there began , in fact , to develop a rela- tionship that would help create the theatre for which he wrote . Printing , far from ...
... stage and the early stage kept aloof from the press . But nearly a century before Shakespeare was born , there began , in fact , to develop a rela- tionship that would help create the theatre for which he wrote . Printing , far from ...
Page 9
... stage . Chapter 7 , " The Sense of the Senses : Sound , Gesture , and the Body on Stage , " examines the role of print in the represen- tation and notation of theatrical media , looking at the shifting positions of the senses identified ...
... stage . Chapter 7 , " The Sense of the Senses : Sound , Gesture , and the Body on Stage , " examines the role of print in the represen- tation and notation of theatrical media , looking at the shifting positions of the senses identified ...
Page 10
... stage bodies and the turn towards the closet , but the simultaneous recognition of the inherent powers of the theatrical ( in formal aesthetics as well as stage practice ) and the resulting articulation of an idealist aesthetics married ...
... stage bodies and the turn towards the closet , but the simultaneous recognition of the inherent powers of the theatrical ( in formal aesthetics as well as stage practice ) and the resulting articulation of an idealist aesthetics married ...
Contents
Experimenting on the Page 14801630 | 15 |
Drama us Institution 16301760 | 41 |
Illustrations Promptbooks Stage Texts 17601880 | 66 |
THEATRE IMPRIMATUR | 91 |
Reinventing Theatre via the Printing Press | 93 |
Critical Law Theatrical License | 113 |
Accurate Texts Authoritative Editions | 129 |
THE SENSES OF MEDIA | 145 |
Dramatists Poets and Other Scribblers | 203 |
Who Owns the Play? Pirate Plagiarist Imitator Thief | 219 |
Making it Public | 237 |
THEATRICAL IMPRESSIONS | 255 |
Scenic Pictures | 257 |
ActorAuthor | 276 |
A Theatre Too Much With Us | 294 |
Epilogue | 308 |
Other editions - View all
Theatre of the Book, 1480-1880: Print, Text, and Performance in Europe Julie Stone Peters Limited preview - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
17th century acting action actors aesthetic Alexandre Hardy ancient Aristotle audience Beaumont and Fletcher Ben Jonson booksellers Castelvetro characters Charlotte Charke Cibber classical collection Comédie-Française Comedies commedia dell'arte copies Corneille culture dedication dialogue discussion dramatic texts dramatists early edition eighteenth century English explains farces folio France French genres gesture Heywood identified illustrations imagination imitation instance Italian John Jonson kind language letters Library literary livres London Lope Lope de Vega Lord Chamberlain manuscript medieval Mémoires modern Molière narrative Œuvres offer Paris patrons performance playbooks playhouse playwrights poem poet poetic poetry preface printed plays printers production prologue promptbooks published qu'il quarto readers reading Renaissance representation represented Robinson Crusoé scene scenic scripts senses seventeenth century Shakespeare similarly space spectacle spectators speech stage directions Teatro Terence textual theatre theatrical Thomas tion tragedy trans translation troupe words writes