This dissertation examines mirror figures in three interlude dramas and two of Shakespeare’s histories. I argue that these plays use characters who function as spectators by interpreting the dramatic action. Each mirror figure, however, makes unreliable interpretations that force the audience to reject their assessments. The plays offer no characters to act as alternatives to the unreliable mirror figures, and as a result, the audience must step in to make their own judgment of the plays’ messages. This creates a dramaturgy of participation as the playwrights constantly provoke the audience to actively engage with the action on stage and challenge the interpretations of the unreliable figures. I engage with theories of performance and metat...
Although a great deal has been written about stage objects as literary symbols, very little attentio...
Taking its cue from the many Renaissance playwrights who emphasized their spectators’ participation,...
The purpose of this thesis is to suggest something of the extent to which the image of the theatre i...
This dissertation argues that early modern playwrights used metadrama to construct the experience an...
This dissertation contends that guilds-folk in sixteenth-century England made their own changes to t...
The early modern English theater abounds with sights that were prepared, designed, and built to be s...
The Tempest has spawned many widely divergent interpretations because its elusive, open-ended nature...
In his essay Jacobean Shakespeare, Maynard Mack explains the system of mirroring that produces S...
Spectator Narratives: Print Representations of Performance and Nineteenth-Century Audiences examines...
This paper aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge, and its connection...
This dissertation is concerned with the paradox of revelatory deception a form of 'lying' which re...
In his essay Jacobean Shakespeare, Maynard Mack explains the system of mirroring that produces S...
Spectator Narratives: Print Representations of Performance and Nineteenth-Century Audiences examines...
This paper aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge, and its connection...
Since reading Shakespeare for the first time often causes students to doubt themselves or quit from ...
Although a great deal has been written about stage objects as literary symbols, very little attentio...
Taking its cue from the many Renaissance playwrights who emphasized their spectators’ participation,...
The purpose of this thesis is to suggest something of the extent to which the image of the theatre i...
This dissertation argues that early modern playwrights used metadrama to construct the experience an...
This dissertation contends that guilds-folk in sixteenth-century England made their own changes to t...
The early modern English theater abounds with sights that were prepared, designed, and built to be s...
The Tempest has spawned many widely divergent interpretations because its elusive, open-ended nature...
In his essay Jacobean Shakespeare, Maynard Mack explains the system of mirroring that produces S...
Spectator Narratives: Print Representations of Performance and Nineteenth-Century Audiences examines...
This paper aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge, and its connection...
This dissertation is concerned with the paradox of revelatory deception a form of 'lying' which re...
In his essay Jacobean Shakespeare, Maynard Mack explains the system of mirroring that produces S...
Spectator Narratives: Print Representations of Performance and Nineteenth-Century Audiences examines...
This paper aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge, and its connection...
Since reading Shakespeare for the first time often causes students to doubt themselves or quit from ...
Although a great deal has been written about stage objects as literary symbols, very little attentio...
Taking its cue from the many Renaissance playwrights who emphasized their spectators’ participation,...
The purpose of this thesis is to suggest something of the extent to which the image of the theatre i...