Shakespeare's Early History Plays: Politics at Play on the Elizabethan Stage
This study examines the early history plays - the first tetralogy and "King John" - as plays, not only by analyzing their theatrical dimensions but also be connecting their staging with the playhouse as a social institution and with the theatricality of Elizabethan culture in the 1590s.
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Shakespeare's Early History Plays: Politics at Play on the Elizabethan Stage
This study examines the early history plays - the first tetralogy and "King John" - as plays, not only by analyzing their theatrical dimensions but also be connecting their staging with the playhouse as a social institution and with the theatricality of Elizabethan culture in the 1590s.
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Shakespeare's Early History Plays: Politics at Play on the Elizabethan Stage

Shakespeare's Early History Plays: Politics at Play on the Elizabethan Stage

by Donald Watson
Shakespeare's Early History Plays: Politics at Play on the Elizabethan Stage

Shakespeare's Early History Plays: Politics at Play on the Elizabethan Stage

by Donald Watson

Paperback(1st ed. 1990)

$59.99 
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Overview

This study examines the early history plays - the first tetralogy and "King John" - as plays, not only by analyzing their theatrical dimensions but also be connecting their staging with the playhouse as a social institution and with the theatricality of Elizabethan culture in the 1590s.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781349110377
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Publication date: 01/14/2014
Edition description: 1st ed. 1990
Pages: 177
Product dimensions: 5.51(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

Part I Theatre, history, politics: theatrical dimensions of the dramatic text; theatricality and politics; the theatre as an institution. Part 2 "Henry VI": spectacles of chaos; from ceremony to "practice". Part 3 "Henry VI": madness and butchery; savage comedy and the audience's nightmare. Part 4 "Henry VI": the law of the scabbard; ritualizing atrocity. Part 5 "Richard III": the actor's audience; faction and providence. Part 6 "King John": John and "The Arts of Fallacy"; the political language of excess. Part 7 Paradox, play, politics.
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