Marlowe and the Popular Tradition: Innovation in the English Drama Before 1595Manchester University Press, 2002 - 246 páginas Rejecting the traditional stereotypes of Marlowe (spy, troublemaker, homosexual, atheist, university wit) this study considers him as a popular dramatist who inherited an audience with certain expectations and shared experiences. It explores his engagement with the traditions of the popular stage in the 1580s and early 1590s and offers a new approach to his major plays in terms of staging and audience response. This account of English drama in these important but largely neglected years challenges the narratives of change in late 16th century. It Discusses Marlowe's plays in relation to some 30 other playtexts, earlier and contemporary, including Shakespeare's early plays. Marlowe emerges not so much as a precursor of Shakespeare but as an innovator and catalyst of change, the playwright who exploited and transformed the traditional materials of popular drama. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 71
Página 76
... Instances such as these accommodate new stories or dramatic mate- rials to old habits of seeing . Their restating of moral and political commonplaces calls upon audiences to recognise - and reinforces a shared sense of the way things ...
... Instances such as these accommodate new stories or dramatic mate- rials to old habits of seeing . Their restating of moral and political commonplaces calls upon audiences to recognise - and reinforces a shared sense of the way things ...
Página 116
... instances of black comedy do occur in the moralities , its effect in these earlier plays is somewhat different . The scenes of violent farce are often used explicitly to underline a moral message ; in any case they are never far removed ...
... instances of black comedy do occur in the moralities , its effect in these earlier plays is somewhat different . The scenes of violent farce are often used explicitly to underline a moral message ; in any case they are never far removed ...
Página 209
... instances in Faustus where the attention of the audience is drawn to individual moments of experience include the second encounter with Helen , and Faustus's farewell to the Scholars ( here , as elsewhere , his detachment from others is ...
... instances in Faustus where the attention of the audience is drawn to individual moments of experience include the second encounter with Helen , and Faustus's farewell to the Scholars ( here , as elsewhere , his detachment from others is ...
Contenido
Approaches and contexts | 14 |
Viewing the sign | 36 |
Lessons of history | 67 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 4 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Marlowe and the Popular Tradition: Innovation in the English Drama Before 1595 Ruth Lunney Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Marlowe and the Popular Tradition: Innovation in the English Drama before 1595 Ruth Lunney Sin vista previa disponible - 2011 |
Términos y frases comunes
action Apius attention B-text Barabas Barabas's Bevington bond-signing Cambises Cambridge ceremony challenge Christopher Marlowe Clyomon and Clamydes commentary context conventional critical cultural debatable Doctor Faustus dramatic emblems dramatic rhetoric earlier plays early audiences Edward Edward II effect Elizabethan emblematic emotional English example exempla exemplum expectations exploit Faustus's figure on stage framing rhetoric Hattaway Henry Henry VI individual instances interpretation ironies Jew of Malta King Ladies of London late morality late sixteenth-century Lightborn Machiavellian Marlowe's plays medieval Mephistopheles Moral Plays narrative offers opposed voices particular performance perspectives play's players playgoers playhouse playtext playworld playwright Prologue psychomachia Queen's Men recognise Renaissance Drama response Revels Plays Richard Richard II scene sense Shakespeare shift sixteenth Spanish Tragedy spectators speech studies suggests Tamburlaine plays theatre theatrical experience theatrical space Three Ladies Three Lords tion Titus Andronicus traditional rhetoric Troublesome Reign University Press Vice visual signs