Renaissance Drama

Front Cover
Polity, 2007 M11 19 - 224 pages
Renaissance Drama provides a comprehensive and engaging new account of one of the richest periods of theatre history: the drama of early modern England produced for the professional theatre. It brings new insights to bear by exploring the plays in their relation to the culture and society of the period.

Sandra Clark takes the reader through a compelling examination of how plays participate in and respond to changing anxieties, for instance about English nationhood, the monarchy, or the role of the family, sometimes raising difficult questions or offering challenges to accepted views. Unlike many books on Elizabethan drama, the book is organized so as to cover a wide range of plays, some familiar, many less so, by many playwrights, from Lyly in the 1580s to Shirley in the 1640s. Shakespeare is not foregrounded, but neither is he excluded; a chapter considers his dialogue with contemporaries and also the ways in which later playwrights wrote back to his work.

Renaissance Drama will become standard reading for all students and scholars of English literature or the early modern period.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Monarchy and the Stage
23
Sex Marriage and the Family
44
Journalistic Plays
63
History Plays
84
Tragedies of Tyrants
106
Reading Revenge
127
Comedy and the City
151
Preface
231
Introduction
1
Monarchy and the Stage
23
Sex Marriage and the Family
44
Journalistic Plays
63
History Plays
84
Tragedies of Tyrants
106
Reading Revenge
127

The Place of Shakespeare
170
Epilogue
189
Notes
191
Further Reading
206
Editions and Primary Texts
212
Index
215
Contents
229
Illustrations
230
Comedy and the City
151
The Place of Shakespeare
170
Epilogue
189
Notes
191
Further Reading
206
Editions and Primary Texts
212
Index
215

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