The fashion for tyrants on the Elizabethan stage reflected a sort of affinity between tyranny and theatre. How did the two things fit together? A tyrant is not a true king, but only seems to be one, and so is like an actor playing a king. Because he has no right to the throne, he must assert his rule by personal and rhetorical force - the actor's resources. Moreover, a tyrant is understood to be a figure in whom appetite conquers reason, self-control gives way to desire - as happens (according to hostile accounts) in the theatre. This logic applies particularly to popular theatre, where the tyrant is sustained by his dynamic relationship with the audience. In comparison with the tyrants of academic or humanist drama, who are uneasy and isol...
In 1603 the world as England knew it changed. After forty-five years Elizabeth I, Queen of England, ...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
The world has come to regard William Shakespeare as a literary genius who used the stage as a tool f...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) lived in turbulent times. In the guise of examining what the Romans ...
The tyrant is a frequent figure of seventeenth-century theater. While not as ubiquitous as young lov...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
Pharaoh, Caesar Augustus, Herod the Great, and Pontius Pilate—the four tyrants of the Towneley or Wa...
<p>The Biblical drama that was popular in England from the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries is a fr...
Late Elizabethan society was marked with the growing discontent about socio-economic failures result...
text“‘King Hereafter’” posits Shakespearean theater as a gateway between Reformation England’s suppr...
This paper explores how the lower classes voice discontent or political dissent in an acceptable bal...
Tyranny (tyrannis) is a name given to a type of Greek monarchy that came into being in the seventh c...
In William Shakespeare\u27s Elizabethan plays, role-play is capable of the highest form of empowerme...
In Elizabethan drama treason was a dramatic device of paramount importance. Most of Shakespeare’s wo...
In 1603 the world as England knew it changed. After forty-five years Elizabeth I, Queen of England, ...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
The world has come to regard William Shakespeare as a literary genius who used the stage as a tool f...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) lived in turbulent times. In the guise of examining what the Romans ...
The tyrant is a frequent figure of seventeenth-century theater. While not as ubiquitous as young lov...
Literary and dramatic representations of tyranny abound since antiquity alongside critical distincti...
Pharaoh, Caesar Augustus, Herod the Great, and Pontius Pilate—the four tyrants of the Towneley or Wa...
<p>The Biblical drama that was popular in England from the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries is a fr...
Late Elizabethan society was marked with the growing discontent about socio-economic failures result...
text“‘King Hereafter’” posits Shakespearean theater as a gateway between Reformation England’s suppr...
This paper explores how the lower classes voice discontent or political dissent in an acceptable bal...
Tyranny (tyrannis) is a name given to a type of Greek monarchy that came into being in the seventh c...
In William Shakespeare\u27s Elizabethan plays, role-play is capable of the highest form of empowerme...
In Elizabethan drama treason was a dramatic device of paramount importance. Most of Shakespeare’s wo...
In 1603 the world as England knew it changed. After forty-five years Elizabeth I, Queen of England, ...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
The world has come to regard William Shakespeare as a literary genius who used the stage as a tool f...