This dissertation falls in line with work produced during the past fifteen years or so, aimed at improving our appreciation of late medieval/early Tudor English Drama. The approach is based especially on looking at the rapport likely to be achieved between audience and players (and via the players, with the playwrights), in actual performance. Attention is given to the permanent modes of human thought, that are unaffected by the ephemeralities of a particular period; attention is therefore drawn to the traps that may mislead the unwary twentieth-century critic, and some new insights are offered into the purposes of the playwrights. Several cycle plays are treated, together with two of the moralities and two interludes. The point...
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This dissertation examines mirror figures in three interlude dramas and two of Shakespeare’s histori...
This thesis is an analysis of the responses in the early modern period of civic and church authorit...
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityLittle has been wri...
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 thesis studies the relationship of playwright, actor and audience in Beaumont and Fletcher plays...
English DepartmentCollege of Arts & Science© Cambridge University Press. Reprinted with permission
This paper speculates about what modern reception theory, focusing as it does on assumed cultural no...
This study presents a novel approach to the history of books and reading by encouraging scholars to ...
In examining examples of prologues, inductions, and choruses from early modern drama, Authors, Audie...
This dissertation argues that scholarly characters in popular plays reveal contradictions and confli...
This dissertation contends that guilds-folk in sixteenth-century England made their own changes to t...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This dissertation examines mirror figures in three interlude dramas and two of Shakespeare’s histori...
This thesis is an analysis of the responses in the early modern period of civic and church authorit...
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityLittle has been wri...
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 thesis studies the relationship of playwright, actor and audience in Beaumont and Fletcher plays...
English DepartmentCollege of Arts & Science© Cambridge University Press. Reprinted with permission
This paper speculates about what modern reception theory, focusing as it does on assumed cultural no...
This study presents a novel approach to the history of books and reading by encouraging scholars to ...
In examining examples of prologues, inductions, and choruses from early modern drama, Authors, Audie...
This dissertation argues that scholarly characters in popular plays reveal contradictions and confli...
This dissertation contends that guilds-folk in sixteenth-century England made their own changes to t...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This dissertation examines mirror figures in three interlude dramas and two of Shakespeare’s histori...
This thesis is an analysis of the responses in the early modern period of civic and church authorit...