This doctoral thesis looks anew at the representation of women in the non-Shakespearean plays of early Stuart England (1603-1642). The chapters progress chronologically, locating common themes of the period, which I analyse independently in each chapter, and consider in the conclusion comprehensively. The introduction serves to present these recurring themes and alert the reader to their importance and relevance to the period as a whole. Chapter 1 considers adultery and torture, as well as the ramifications of a woman's speaking and writing in George Chapman' s The Tragedy of Bussy D 'Ambois (1604). Chapter 2 investigates the nature of villainy, and also the moral ambiguity in the representation of suicide in Thomas Heywood's The Rape ofLuc...
This dissertation explores how stage properties contribute to the enterprise of depicting the desire...
This thesis examines scenes of women’s dialogue in neoclassical tragedies of the English Renaissance...
I would like to write about the perception of madness in Elizabethan England. William Shakespeare’s ...
This thesis uses the social history of Early Modern England to provide the context for a discussion ...
The adaptations of Shakespeare‘s plays that were written and staged during the English Restoration a...
Although Elizabethan and Jacobean drama as a whole has provoked more study from critics than almost ...
“Gendering Violence: Rethinking Coercion and Consent in Early Modern English Literature” puts variou...
This study is a survey of the presentation of women in English drama from 1300 - 1600, and of the re...
“Gendering Violence: Rethinking Coercion and Consent in Early Modern English Literature” puts variou...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.This dissertation examines cont...
This study will explore the relationship between violence, emotion and power in early modern drama r...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyse the dramatic results of introducing women to replace boy-ac...
This dissertation examines the role of the stage in cultural debate about revenge in early modern En...
Taking a feminist-historicist approach, this thesis analyses representations of rape in the period 1...
This thesis analyses how early modern English history plays deploy representations of ‘unquiet’ medi...
This dissertation explores how stage properties contribute to the enterprise of depicting the desire...
This thesis examines scenes of women’s dialogue in neoclassical tragedies of the English Renaissance...
I would like to write about the perception of madness in Elizabethan England. William Shakespeare’s ...
This thesis uses the social history of Early Modern England to provide the context for a discussion ...
The adaptations of Shakespeare‘s plays that were written and staged during the English Restoration a...
Although Elizabethan and Jacobean drama as a whole has provoked more study from critics than almost ...
“Gendering Violence: Rethinking Coercion and Consent in Early Modern English Literature” puts variou...
This study is a survey of the presentation of women in English drama from 1300 - 1600, and of the re...
“Gendering Violence: Rethinking Coercion and Consent in Early Modern English Literature” puts variou...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.This dissertation examines cont...
This study will explore the relationship between violence, emotion and power in early modern drama r...
The purpose of this thesis is to analyse the dramatic results of introducing women to replace boy-ac...
This dissertation examines the role of the stage in cultural debate about revenge in early modern En...
Taking a feminist-historicist approach, this thesis analyses representations of rape in the period 1...
This thesis analyses how early modern English history plays deploy representations of ‘unquiet’ medi...
This dissertation explores how stage properties contribute to the enterprise of depicting the desire...
This thesis examines scenes of women’s dialogue in neoclassical tragedies of the English Renaissance...
I would like to write about the perception of madness in Elizabethan England. William Shakespeare’s ...