Fr. 40.90

Theatre Closure and the Paradoxical Rise of English Renaissance - Drama in the Civil War

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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"Focusing on the production and reception of drama during the theatre closures of 1642 to 1660, Heidi Craig shows how the "death" of contemporary theatre in fact gave birth to English Renaissance drama as a critical field. While the prohibition on playing in many respects killed the English stage, drama thrived in print, with stationers publishing unprecedented numbers of previously unprinted professional plays, vaunting playbooks' ties to the receding theatrical past. Marketed in terms of novelty and nostalgia, plays unprinted before 1642 gained new life. Stationers also anatomized the whole corpus of English drama, printing the first anthologies and comprehensive catalogues of drama. Craig captures this crucial turning-point in English theatre history with chapters on royalist nostalgia, clandestine theatrical revivals, dramatic compendia, and the mysteriously small number of Shakespeare editions issued during the period, as well as a new incisive reading of Beaumont and Fletcher's A King and No King"--

List of contents










1. Dead theatre, printed relics; 2. Old Shakespeare; 3. Canonizing Beaumont and Fletcher; 4. Chronic conditions; 5. Morbid symptoms.

About the author

Heidi Craig is Assistant Professor of English at Texas A&M University, editor of the World Shakespeare Bibliography and co-editor of Early Modern Dramatic Paratexts. She is the recipient of fellowships from the Huntington Library, Newberry Library, and Folger Shakespeare Library.

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