This dissertation explores the relationship between space, time, dramatic narrative, and group identity in the Jacobean court masque. In early 17th century England, the court masque was a high-profile and multimodal seasonal event for the nation’s royal family and their court. Critics have recognized many of the ways the masque bonded this group together, but have not shown how its cohesive power manifested in individual masques. Following critical consensus, this dissertation first shows how all masque events, regardless of their particular elements and contexts, involved courtiers in embodied experiences of group inclusion, socio-political hierarchy, and royal favor. Next, in a series of case studies, this dissertation shows how three Jac...
The Jacobean plays that perform Henry VIII and his court struggle with Henry's paradoxical image and...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
Early Stuart court culture and the representation of majesty and power have been the subjects of con...
This dissertation explores the relationship between space, time, dramatic narrative, and group ident...
This thesis is concerned with the early modem court masques (chiefly those produced during the reign...
This thesis is concerned with the early modem court masques (chiefly those produced during the reign...
This thesis analyzes definitions of 'the court' throughout the early modem period by assessing a ra...
This thesis investigates the contribution and significance in performance of supernumeraries in Brit...
This dissertation revises the critical understanding of masque in the early modern period. While pas...
This dissertation revises the critical understanding of masque in the early modern period. While pas...
This paper focuses on the role of the royal and aristocratic audience in the masques produced in the...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to supply modern readers and s...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to supply modern readers and s...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the dramatic function of the Court Masque in the plays of W...
This dissertation examines social mobility as treated in stage comedies and litigation records circa...
The Jacobean plays that perform Henry VIII and his court struggle with Henry's paradoxical image and...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
Early Stuart court culture and the representation of majesty and power have been the subjects of con...
This dissertation explores the relationship between space, time, dramatic narrative, and group ident...
This thesis is concerned with the early modem court masques (chiefly those produced during the reign...
This thesis is concerned with the early modem court masques (chiefly those produced during the reign...
This thesis analyzes definitions of 'the court' throughout the early modem period by assessing a ra...
This thesis investigates the contribution and significance in performance of supernumeraries in Brit...
This dissertation revises the critical understanding of masque in the early modern period. While pas...
This dissertation revises the critical understanding of masque in the early modern period. While pas...
This paper focuses on the role of the royal and aristocratic audience in the masques produced in the...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to supply modern readers and s...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to supply modern readers and s...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the dramatic function of the Court Masque in the plays of W...
This dissertation examines social mobility as treated in stage comedies and litigation records circa...
The Jacobean plays that perform Henry VIII and his court struggle with Henry's paradoxical image and...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
Early Stuart court culture and the representation of majesty and power have been the subjects of con...