This article revisits contemporary critical debates surrounding the presence of cross-dressed boys as women on the early modern stage – in particular the question of whether or to what extent boy-actors could or should be said to represent ‘women’ or ‘femininity’ – through the Shakespearian emblem of the bloody rag or handkercher. In all but one instance, these soiled napkins appear alongside what the plays call ‘passion’ of various kinds. I examine bloody rags on Shakespeare’s stage in the light of early modern anti-theatrical polemics, medical disputes about sex-difference and the conflicted cultural status of printed paper in order to argue that these besmirched tokens bring together early modern ‘passions’ in multiple senses: strong or ...
This study will explore the relationship between violence, emotion and power in early modern drama r...
This project concerns the ways in which Shakespearean literature becomes translated into political t...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.This dissertation examines cont...
This essay discusses blood as 'proof' in the late fifteenth-century Croxton Play of the Sacrament, ...
This essay explores the treatment of female characters in Renaissance revenge tragedy: specifically ...
This paper analyzes the problems of the female body and femininity, and then investigates the interp...
Growing out of recent scholarship on humoral theory and emotions in early modern literary texts, thi...
This thesis examines four of William Shakespeare’s plays that ‘property’ bodies and dehumanize chara...
Shakespeare’s comedies mark his artistic excellence in the portrayal of woman characters. Shakespear...
Shakespeare’s Whore examines how prostitution operates like a language in early modern England: info...
This doctoral thesis looks anew at the representation of women in the non-Shakespearean plays of ear...
Shakespeare’s play, The Taming of the Shrew, has a long and contentious history due to the discontin...
Includes bibliographical references (page 27).This article argues that despite reflecting the age-ol...
This essay explores the treatment of female characters in Renaissance revenge tragedy: specifically ...
This thesis examines the relationship between the sexual formation of identity and three ‘impressing...
This study will explore the relationship between violence, emotion and power in early modern drama r...
This project concerns the ways in which Shakespearean literature becomes translated into political t...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.This dissertation examines cont...
This essay discusses blood as 'proof' in the late fifteenth-century Croxton Play of the Sacrament, ...
This essay explores the treatment of female characters in Renaissance revenge tragedy: specifically ...
This paper analyzes the problems of the female body and femininity, and then investigates the interp...
Growing out of recent scholarship on humoral theory and emotions in early modern literary texts, thi...
This thesis examines four of William Shakespeare’s plays that ‘property’ bodies and dehumanize chara...
Shakespeare’s comedies mark his artistic excellence in the portrayal of woman characters. Shakespear...
Shakespeare’s Whore examines how prostitution operates like a language in early modern England: info...
This doctoral thesis looks anew at the representation of women in the non-Shakespearean plays of ear...
Shakespeare’s play, The Taming of the Shrew, has a long and contentious history due to the discontin...
Includes bibliographical references (page 27).This article argues that despite reflecting the age-ol...
This essay explores the treatment of female characters in Renaissance revenge tragedy: specifically ...
This thesis examines the relationship between the sexual formation of identity and three ‘impressing...
This study will explore the relationship between violence, emotion and power in early modern drama r...
This project concerns the ways in which Shakespearean literature becomes translated into political t...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.This dissertation examines cont...