In Medieval England, games and plays were cognate activities. By Shakespeare’s time, “games” seem to have become a category distinct from drama, but the persistence of the term “player” suggests that theatrical performance was still considered a form of ludic activity. This essay historicises the term “game”, thinking about the meanings of the word available to the early modern player and the ways in which those meanings are both similar to and different from those available to modern actors and directors. It then examines game-like practice at the modern Shakespeare’s Globe, considering the extent to which the contemporary experiment allows us any kind of insight into the early modern dramaturgy of the “game”
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This essay explores the level of control imposed upon the experience of interactive play which the a...
This article examines the intersection between theatrical and political discourse in early modern En...
Twenty-four plays in the extant early modern dramatic canon feature gamesters at play, and over eigh...
This dissertation explores the cultural implications of gaming in early modern England. In a histori...
This study explores the cultural implications of theatrical performance in early modern England. Eve...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
Recent research on patronage, performance and playing spaces in early modern England allows us to re...
<div>Rich connections between gaming and theater stretch back to the 16th and 17th centuries, when E...
Although scholarly interest in available “alternatives” to early modern London theater has recently ...
This dissertation addresses the social significance of parlour games as forms of cultural expression...
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onwa...
The study of early drama has undergone a quiet revolution in the last four decades, radically alteri...
This book offers an accessible introduction to England’s sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century pl...
For an ethical relation to exist between two interlocutors, according to Emmanuel Levinas, the poten...
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This essay explores the level of control imposed upon the experience of interactive play which the a...
This article examines the intersection between theatrical and political discourse in early modern En...
Twenty-four plays in the extant early modern dramatic canon feature gamesters at play, and over eigh...
This dissertation explores the cultural implications of gaming in early modern England. In a histori...
This study explores the cultural implications of theatrical performance in early modern England. Eve...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
Recent research on patronage, performance and playing spaces in early modern England allows us to re...
<div>Rich connections between gaming and theater stretch back to the 16th and 17th centuries, when E...
Although scholarly interest in available “alternatives” to early modern London theater has recently ...
This dissertation addresses the social significance of parlour games as forms of cultural expression...
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onwa...
The study of early drama has undergone a quiet revolution in the last four decades, radically alteri...
This book offers an accessible introduction to England’s sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century pl...
For an ethical relation to exist between two interlocutors, according to Emmanuel Levinas, the poten...
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This essay explores the level of control imposed upon the experience of interactive play which the a...
This article examines the intersection between theatrical and political discourse in early modern En...