Le titre prévu par l'auteur est 'Elizabeth I, Dido and Oxford: Staging Power in the University Drama', et non celui donné par erreur au moment de la publication. De récentes études du drame universitaire élisabéthain ont considérablement éclairé notre compréhension de la façon dont certaines pièces spécifiques avaient été sélectionnées comme idéales pour une mise en scène, mettant en relief la relation entre « la robe et la couronne ». Cet article part de ce postulat, suggérant que la pièce a pu être utilisée pour considérer plutôt que pour montrer uniquement, à la fois une image particulière de la Reine et le potentiel particulier du drame académique dans sa mise en scène.The intended authorial title is 'Elizabeth I, Dido and Oxfor...
English: This article considers the instability of the bare Elizabethan stage in relation to two sig...
Pageantry and Power is the first full and in-depth cultural history of the Lord Mayor’s Show in the ...
This essay deepens our growing understanding of Caroline theatre as a vibrant space that boldly enga...
The aim of this article is to explore Elizabeth’s performative power as manifesting itself on the sc...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
In this paper, Leahy argues that Shakespeare’s portrayal of Anne Boleyn in King Henry VIII has trad...
At first glance all you see is a window in a vaulted ceiling. You expect this from an Oxford college...
In 1603 the world as England knew it changed. After forty-five years Elizabeth I, Queen of England, ...
This paper considers documentary evidence relating to the performance of Richard Edwards’ Palamon an...
This paper focuses on the role of the royal and aristocratic audience in the masques produced in the...
During the reign of Queen Elizabeth, sport and amusement became increasingly popular to everyone. E...
In charting the remarkable rise of St John's College, Oxford, from struggling, new-born foundation i...
Renaissance England is often discussed in the context of theatre and theatrical acting. The fact is...
The beginning of Shakespeare's 2 Henry IV takes the form of an address to the audience, as a single ...
The Queen’s College Oxford was founded in 1341 ‘under the name of the Hall of the Queen’s scholars o...
English: This article considers the instability of the bare Elizabethan stage in relation to two sig...
Pageantry and Power is the first full and in-depth cultural history of the Lord Mayor’s Show in the ...
This essay deepens our growing understanding of Caroline theatre as a vibrant space that boldly enga...
The aim of this article is to explore Elizabeth’s performative power as manifesting itself on the sc...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
In this paper, Leahy argues that Shakespeare’s portrayal of Anne Boleyn in King Henry VIII has trad...
At first glance all you see is a window in a vaulted ceiling. You expect this from an Oxford college...
In 1603 the world as England knew it changed. After forty-five years Elizabeth I, Queen of England, ...
This paper considers documentary evidence relating to the performance of Richard Edwards’ Palamon an...
This paper focuses on the role of the royal and aristocratic audience in the masques produced in the...
During the reign of Queen Elizabeth, sport and amusement became increasingly popular to everyone. E...
In charting the remarkable rise of St John's College, Oxford, from struggling, new-born foundation i...
Renaissance England is often discussed in the context of theatre and theatrical acting. The fact is...
The beginning of Shakespeare's 2 Henry IV takes the form of an address to the audience, as a single ...
The Queen’s College Oxford was founded in 1341 ‘under the name of the Hall of the Queen’s scholars o...
English: This article considers the instability of the bare Elizabethan stage in relation to two sig...
Pageantry and Power is the first full and in-depth cultural history of the Lord Mayor’s Show in the ...
This essay deepens our growing understanding of Caroline theatre as a vibrant space that boldly enga...