The essay explores the uses of Rome in the theatre of Richard Brome. The myth of Rome is a cultural, moral and political paradigm in the Caroline age. Unexpectedly, the analysis of the corpus of Brome, one of the most significant playwrights of the period and \u201cliterary son\u201d to Ben Jonson, reveals the absence of a celebration of the myth of Rome, its protagonists and its language, Latin. Unlike Jonson\u2019s works, none of his plays have a Roman theme; moreover, the occurrence of the terms \u201cRoman\u201d and \u201cRome\u201d is very low and, in most cases, they refer to seventeenth century Catholic Rome rather than ancient Rome. Nevertheless the allusions to Roman culture, traditions and history, even though not celebratory and ...
peer reviewedDrama written for the commercial stage during the 1630s has long been seen as falling n...
The most neglected of the English Renaissance playwrights are the major Carolines-Philip Massinger, ...
In my study of Shakespeare\u27s and Jonson\u27s Roman tragedies written during the first decade of t...
Rome was a recurring theme throughout Shakespeare's career, from the celebrated Julius Caesar, to th...
Of some eighty Roman history plays written or performed in English between 1550 and 1635, forty-thre...
The present study considers Brome’s playbooks and his reputation as a dramatist from the perspective...
A Jovial Crew: or, The Merry Beggars was first performed at Beeston’s Cockpit Theatre in Drury Lane ...
This article proposes an analysis of the image of the Italian in the plays of Shakespeare and Ben Jo...
Shakespeare creates a Rome in which he brings together and reinvents Rome's political and military b...
The present paper intends to discuss the reasons for the long neglect and undervaluation of drama in...
This thesis explores the ways in which music and song were used on the Caroline stage and demonstrat...
As Lisa Hopkins argues in The Cultural Uses of the Caesars on the English Renaissance Stage, a spate...
Introduction to my own volume. The book addresses the memory of Rome: the dialectic between the glor...
The book addresses the memory of Rome: the dialectic between the glorious historical past of the Rom...
Improvisation played a significant role in both early English theatrical performance and early Engli...
peer reviewedDrama written for the commercial stage during the 1630s has long been seen as falling n...
The most neglected of the English Renaissance playwrights are the major Carolines-Philip Massinger, ...
In my study of Shakespeare\u27s and Jonson\u27s Roman tragedies written during the first decade of t...
Rome was a recurring theme throughout Shakespeare's career, from the celebrated Julius Caesar, to th...
Of some eighty Roman history plays written or performed in English between 1550 and 1635, forty-thre...
The present study considers Brome’s playbooks and his reputation as a dramatist from the perspective...
A Jovial Crew: or, The Merry Beggars was first performed at Beeston’s Cockpit Theatre in Drury Lane ...
This article proposes an analysis of the image of the Italian in the plays of Shakespeare and Ben Jo...
Shakespeare creates a Rome in which he brings together and reinvents Rome's political and military b...
The present paper intends to discuss the reasons for the long neglect and undervaluation of drama in...
This thesis explores the ways in which music and song were used on the Caroline stage and demonstrat...
As Lisa Hopkins argues in The Cultural Uses of the Caesars on the English Renaissance Stage, a spate...
Introduction to my own volume. The book addresses the memory of Rome: the dialectic between the glor...
The book addresses the memory of Rome: the dialectic between the glorious historical past of the Rom...
Improvisation played a significant role in both early English theatrical performance and early Engli...
peer reviewedDrama written for the commercial stage during the 1630s has long been seen as falling n...
The most neglected of the English Renaissance playwrights are the major Carolines-Philip Massinger, ...
In my study of Shakespeare\u27s and Jonson\u27s Roman tragedies written during the first decade of t...