The spectacle of strangeness in early modern drama underscores a paradoxical dynamic of seduction and repulsion. How can a playwright stage the untenable spectacle of violence and maintain the attention of the audience? This study proposes to explore the various textual and dramatic techniques used to stage the spectacle of infamy. Focusing on both metaphorical and material means of expression, we will try to delineate the geographies of morbidity on the early modern stage. Dwelling on the notion of paradoxical spaces common to the stranger and the familiar and on that of the dead body as a locus of anxiety, we will try to analyse the strategies employed by early modern playwrights to express the concept of strangeness
This paper examines the uses of the terms 'folly' and 'madness' in the Middle Ages and Renaissance a...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the English dramatic grotesque is linked inextricably with...
This paper examines the uses of the terms 'folly' and 'madness' in the Middle Ages and Renaissance a...
This thesis examines representations of madness on Elizabethan and Jacobean playhouse stages. It ex...
In “Carv'd out in bloody lines”: Interiority, Truth, and Violence in Early Modern Drama, I examine d...
When early modern plays were staged with black curtains, ‘tragedy’ began the moment the audience ent...
This project takes an interdisciplinary approach to early modern drama, analyzing how playwrights co...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
The study of the body during the Renaissance became a critical focus in the 2000s. Works such as Mic...
This thesis articulates the importance and influence of medical understandings of humoural theory, p...
This thesis investigates the ways mourning was performed on the early modern stage. "Expressions of...
This dissertation investigates the surprising strategy by which early modern English drama explored ...
Thomas Kyd’s The Spanish Tragedy has been widely-read by the academic community, but not always for ...
This article examines physical representation of pain on the early modern stage, taking as its start...
This paper examines the uses of the terms 'folly' and 'madness' in the Middle Ages and Renaissance a...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the English dramatic grotesque is linked inextricably with...
This paper examines the uses of the terms 'folly' and 'madness' in the Middle Ages and Renaissance a...
This thesis examines representations of madness on Elizabethan and Jacobean playhouse stages. It ex...
In “Carv'd out in bloody lines”: Interiority, Truth, and Violence in Early Modern Drama, I examine d...
When early modern plays were staged with black curtains, ‘tragedy’ began the moment the audience ent...
This project takes an interdisciplinary approach to early modern drama, analyzing how playwrights co...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
The study of the body during the Renaissance became a critical focus in the 2000s. Works such as Mic...
This thesis articulates the importance and influence of medical understandings of humoural theory, p...
This thesis investigates the ways mourning was performed on the early modern stage. "Expressions of...
This dissertation investigates the surprising strategy by which early modern English drama explored ...
Thomas Kyd’s The Spanish Tragedy has been widely-read by the academic community, but not always for ...
This article examines physical representation of pain on the early modern stage, taking as its start...
This paper examines the uses of the terms 'folly' and 'madness' in the Middle Ages and Renaissance a...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the English dramatic grotesque is linked inextricably with...
This paper examines the uses of the terms 'folly' and 'madness' in the Middle Ages and Renaissance a...