The Towneley Cycle cannot be overlooked in any study of medieval drama. Undergraduate and graduate courses which focus on medieval literature usually include a strand on medieval drama, and the Second Shepherd’s Play usually features prominently. This book therefore is likely to be recommended to students on such courses as a secondary text, and will be bought by most good University libraries.This volume provides a detailed overview of and critical introduction to the Towneley cycle of plays, a 32-play cycle written in c.1500, which begins with the fall of Lucifer and ends with the Last Judgment, and was performed as part of the festival of Corpus Christi in Wakefield. Peter Happé examines the cycle's textual and manuscript history, and di...
Play Texts and Public Practice in the Chester Cycle, 1422-1607 investigates how the Chester cycle`s ...
This thesis explores the legacy of the iconographic and rhetorical conventions of late medieval pers...
Chapter in The Performance of Middle English Culture. Theatricality as a cultural process is vitally...
This study discusses non-biblical material in seven of Towneley's plays. Five of these plays, Mactac...
Using selected New Testament Wakefield plays, the dissertation examines the way in which play moveme...
The Last Judgment plays of the four Corpus Christi cycles, the Chester, York, the Towneley-Wakefield...
During the nineteenth century critics looked upon the English medieval cycle drama, or Corpus Chris...
Critical commentary on medieval drama has largely ignored both the inherent dramatic value of the En...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is a chronological survey of the history of scho...
It is widely believed that for many years British theatre has developed out of an historical connect...
This paper focuses on treatments and prophesies of the last things in late medieval English religiou...
Contrary to previous scholarship, which has claimed that university drama did not occur at the Engli...
Material on the early religious and mystery plays of England is abundant, rarely do playwrights, how...
Pharaoh, Caesar Augustus, Herod the Great, and Pontius Pilate—the four tyrants of the Towneley or Wa...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is comprised of a study and edition of 'The Resu...
Play Texts and Public Practice in the Chester Cycle, 1422-1607 investigates how the Chester cycle`s ...
This thesis explores the legacy of the iconographic and rhetorical conventions of late medieval pers...
Chapter in The Performance of Middle English Culture. Theatricality as a cultural process is vitally...
This study discusses non-biblical material in seven of Towneley's plays. Five of these plays, Mactac...
Using selected New Testament Wakefield plays, the dissertation examines the way in which play moveme...
The Last Judgment plays of the four Corpus Christi cycles, the Chester, York, the Towneley-Wakefield...
During the nineteenth century critics looked upon the English medieval cycle drama, or Corpus Chris...
Critical commentary on medieval drama has largely ignored both the inherent dramatic value of the En...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is a chronological survey of the history of scho...
It is widely believed that for many years British theatre has developed out of an historical connect...
This paper focuses on treatments and prophesies of the last things in late medieval English religiou...
Contrary to previous scholarship, which has claimed that university drama did not occur at the Engli...
Material on the early religious and mystery plays of England is abundant, rarely do playwrights, how...
Pharaoh, Caesar Augustus, Herod the Great, and Pontius Pilate—the four tyrants of the Towneley or Wa...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is comprised of a study and edition of 'The Resu...
Play Texts and Public Practice in the Chester Cycle, 1422-1607 investigates how the Chester cycle`s ...
This thesis explores the legacy of the iconographic and rhetorical conventions of late medieval pers...
Chapter in The Performance of Middle English Culture. Theatricality as a cultural process is vitally...