Francis Beaumont’s play, The Knight of the Burning Pestle (1607) stages a disjunction between interpretation and legitimate authority, centred around an audience which is empowered partly by the threat of informing. As a contrast, Ben Jonson’s onstage audiences are often allowed only ridiculous or overblown reactions, a kind of instructional dysfunction, while remaining entirely under the control of the author. In The Knight of the Burning Pestle however, the onstage audience are allowed a much more actively intrusive role, as they attempt to hold sway over the writing and production of the play they inhabit. Beaumont’s onstage citizens therefore stage an authorship which feels itself to be under siege by a far more unruly form of audience ...
This essay attends to Beaumont’s recent performance and reception history, documenting a range of ac...
Though Jonson derived the epigraph for the title-page of Bartholomew Fair from Horace’s Epistles,1 t...
King Lear cannot help filling the audience with a sense of helplessness and misery. Such a sense is ...
The first performance of Francis Beaumont’s The Knight of the Burning Pestle at the Blackfriars in 1...
The programme was scanned from an original held in the University Archives."The Knight of the Burnin...
The thesis studies the relationship of playwright, actor and audience in Beaumont and Fletcher plays...
The Knight of the Burning Pestle is a colourful and lively burlesque comedy by Francis Beaumont, per...
Compared to Ben Jonson, Shakespeare seems far more discreet, or even removed from the controversy ab...
Available for non-commercial, internal use by students, staff, and faculty at the University of Mich...
Revenge tragedy rose to prominence during the mid-16th century and blossomed over the course of the ...
The Knight of the Burning Pestle is a colourful and lively burlesque comedy by Francis Beaumont, per...
The staging of regicide in the early modern English theaters was commonplace by 1611, when Francis B...
It has been known since the 1930s that one of the two documented performances of King Lear within Sh...
This essay contextualizes Ben Jonson’s The Alchemist in relation to the social controversy generated...
Does not contain script of the play.Cover title: On seeing an Elizabethan play : with some particula...
This essay attends to Beaumont’s recent performance and reception history, documenting a range of ac...
Though Jonson derived the epigraph for the title-page of Bartholomew Fair from Horace’s Epistles,1 t...
King Lear cannot help filling the audience with a sense of helplessness and misery. Such a sense is ...
The first performance of Francis Beaumont’s The Knight of the Burning Pestle at the Blackfriars in 1...
The programme was scanned from an original held in the University Archives."The Knight of the Burnin...
The thesis studies the relationship of playwright, actor and audience in Beaumont and Fletcher plays...
The Knight of the Burning Pestle is a colourful and lively burlesque comedy by Francis Beaumont, per...
Compared to Ben Jonson, Shakespeare seems far more discreet, or even removed from the controversy ab...
Available for non-commercial, internal use by students, staff, and faculty at the University of Mich...
Revenge tragedy rose to prominence during the mid-16th century and blossomed over the course of the ...
The Knight of the Burning Pestle is a colourful and lively burlesque comedy by Francis Beaumont, per...
The staging of regicide in the early modern English theaters was commonplace by 1611, when Francis B...
It has been known since the 1930s that one of the two documented performances of King Lear within Sh...
This essay contextualizes Ben Jonson’s The Alchemist in relation to the social controversy generated...
Does not contain script of the play.Cover title: On seeing an Elizabethan play : with some particula...
This essay attends to Beaumont’s recent performance and reception history, documenting a range of ac...
Though Jonson derived the epigraph for the title-page of Bartholomew Fair from Horace’s Epistles,1 t...
King Lear cannot help filling the audience with a sense of helplessness and misery. Such a sense is ...