In Thomas Heywood\u27s Apology for Actors (1612), which contributes to the lively debate over the theater in Renaissance England, two murderous wives make cameo appearances. Against claims that the theater displays and corrupts women, Heywood argues that the theater is instead an arena in which criminal women can be found out and controlled. For Heywood, to imagine women as theatergoers and spectators is to imagine them as adulterous and murderous wives, waiting to be discovered. Arguing that plays are not only morally instructive, but have been the discoverers of many notorious murders, Heywood offers two domestike and home-borne examples of the education of murderous wives. In one, for instance, a woman who sees an unusual murder en...
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century public executions were both dramatic and theatrical. But while th...
This dissertation examines the role of "acceptable" feminine violence in Restoration and eighteenth-...
This thesis offers a materialist account of dramatic genre. It shows how English revenge tragedies w...
In Thomas Heywood\u27s Apology for Actors (1612), which contributes to the lively debate over the th...
"True and Home-Born" intervenes in critical debates about early modern domestic tragedy, arguing tha...
BYSTANDERS in A Warning for Fair Women (published in 1599, ‘lately divers times acted’ by the Lord C...
BYSTANDERS in A Warning for Fair Women (published in 1599, ‘lately divers times acted’ by the Lord C...
BYSTANDERS in A Warning for Fair Women (published in 1599, ‘lately divers times acted’ by the Lord C...
Violence Against Women in Early Modern Performance explores rape and domestic violence against women...
This dissertation examines the role of the stage in cultural debate about revenge in early modern En...
This doctoral thesis looks anew at the representation of women in the non-Shakespearean plays of ear...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
There has been a great deal of scholarly focus on the children of William Shakespeare’s plays, where...
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century public executions were both dramatic and theatrical. But while th...
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century public executions were both dramatic and theatrical. But while th...
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century public executions were both dramatic and theatrical. But while th...
This dissertation examines the role of "acceptable" feminine violence in Restoration and eighteenth-...
This thesis offers a materialist account of dramatic genre. It shows how English revenge tragedies w...
In Thomas Heywood\u27s Apology for Actors (1612), which contributes to the lively debate over the th...
"True and Home-Born" intervenes in critical debates about early modern domestic tragedy, arguing tha...
BYSTANDERS in A Warning for Fair Women (published in 1599, ‘lately divers times acted’ by the Lord C...
BYSTANDERS in A Warning for Fair Women (published in 1599, ‘lately divers times acted’ by the Lord C...
BYSTANDERS in A Warning for Fair Women (published in 1599, ‘lately divers times acted’ by the Lord C...
Violence Against Women in Early Modern Performance explores rape and domestic violence against women...
This dissertation examines the role of the stage in cultural debate about revenge in early modern En...
This doctoral thesis looks anew at the representation of women in the non-Shakespearean plays of ear...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
There has been a great deal of scholarly focus on the children of William Shakespeare’s plays, where...
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century public executions were both dramatic and theatrical. But while th...
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century public executions were both dramatic and theatrical. But while th...
Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century public executions were both dramatic and theatrical. But while th...
This dissertation examines the role of "acceptable" feminine violence in Restoration and eighteenth-...
This thesis offers a materialist account of dramatic genre. It shows how English revenge tragedies w...