Using William Shakespeare’s character Mistress Nell Quickly as an example, this article contends that familiarity with both the literary tradition of alewives and the historical conditions in which said literary tradition brewed aids in revising our interpretation of working-class women on the early modern stage. Mistress Quickly, the multi-faceted comic character in three history plays and a city-comedy, resembles closely those women with whom Shakespeare and his contemporaries would have lived and worked in their day-to-day lives. Rather than dismissing her role as minor or merely comic, as previous criticism largely has, scholarship can embrace this character type and her narrative as an example to complicate teleological progressi...
There are numerous examples in which the female characters in William Shakespeare’s plays go against...
The characterization of women in the English theatre during the late seventeenth century shows femal...
"Women brewed and sold most of the ale drunk in medieval England, but after 1350, men slowly took ov...
The subject of my Thesis and accompanying Monograph Document in partial fulfillment of the requireme...
Although the popularity of Shakespeare's Falstaff from 1597 to now receives frequent acknowledgement...
This work concentrates on how Shakespeare represented his female characters in different historical ...
This essay compares some of Shakespeare's female characters to their equivalents in the sources from...
In this article, I tried to give a general understanding of research on the role of women on the sta...
This study measures female power by a given character's capacity for self-determination (i.e. dramat...
William Shakespeare’s plays are notoriously multi-dimensional, as are his characters. In this paper ...
This study is an exploration of how women of the middling sort negotiate power in early modern Engli...
In the majority of Shakespeare’s works, women appear as sustaining and vital characters. They always...
Shakespeare's history plays contain some of the most beloved (Falstaff) and the most reviled (Richar...
Although Sir John Falstaff has historically inspired an abundance of critical considerations commens...
My thesis entitled ‘Women’s wit on stage, 1660-1720’ argues that women’s wit emerged as a distinct c...
There are numerous examples in which the female characters in William Shakespeare’s plays go against...
The characterization of women in the English theatre during the late seventeenth century shows femal...
"Women brewed and sold most of the ale drunk in medieval England, but after 1350, men slowly took ov...
The subject of my Thesis and accompanying Monograph Document in partial fulfillment of the requireme...
Although the popularity of Shakespeare's Falstaff from 1597 to now receives frequent acknowledgement...
This work concentrates on how Shakespeare represented his female characters in different historical ...
This essay compares some of Shakespeare's female characters to their equivalents in the sources from...
In this article, I tried to give a general understanding of research on the role of women on the sta...
This study measures female power by a given character's capacity for self-determination (i.e. dramat...
William Shakespeare’s plays are notoriously multi-dimensional, as are his characters. In this paper ...
This study is an exploration of how women of the middling sort negotiate power in early modern Engli...
In the majority of Shakespeare’s works, women appear as sustaining and vital characters. They always...
Shakespeare's history plays contain some of the most beloved (Falstaff) and the most reviled (Richar...
Although Sir John Falstaff has historically inspired an abundance of critical considerations commens...
My thesis entitled ‘Women’s wit on stage, 1660-1720’ argues that women’s wit emerged as a distinct c...
There are numerous examples in which the female characters in William Shakespeare’s plays go against...
The characterization of women in the English theatre during the late seventeenth century shows femal...
"Women brewed and sold most of the ale drunk in medieval England, but after 1350, men slowly took ov...