My dissertation explores the ideological meanings attached to the Court Wits’ representations of libertine figures in their plays during the 1670s. In describing the Marquis de Sade, Michel Foucault wrote, the libertine is he who, while yielding to all the fantasies of desire and to each of its furies, can, but also must, illuminate their slightest movement with a lucid and deliberately elucidated representation (Order 209). This definition is equally true for the Restoration Court Wits, an elite fraternity of literary and political figures known for their hedonistic philosophy and Epicurean lifestyles that included George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham; John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester; Sir Charles Sedley; Sir George Etherege; and William Wy...
Revenge on the English stage has long been associated with Elizabethan and Renaissance revenge trage...
My dissertation considers how and why representations of female suffering in Restoration tragedy had...
In this dissertation, I argue that British verse tragedies of the Romantic era must be looked at not...
This dissertation reevaluates the role of early modern female libertines as sexual celebrities and a...
This dissertation explores how stage properties contribute to the enterprise of depicting the desire...
My thesis concerns libertine ideals of pleasure in English literature from the time of the Interregn...
My dissertation examines the portrayal of the coquettish character type on the Parisian stage from t...
This dissertation argues that seventeenth-century drama by women should be analyzed as a public disc...
The dissertation focuses on the relationship between political thinking and dramatic expression in t...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2014. Major: French. Advisor: Juliette Cherbuliez. ...
This project examines the changing emotional relationship between the English royal court and the pu...
This dissertation tracks representations of orators in a constellation of British texts throughout t...
If the Renaissance was the Golden Age of English comedy, the Restoration was the Silver. These comed...
This dissertation contends that guilds-folk in sixteenth-century England made their own changes to t...
The courtiers Edmund and Edgar are critical to the action of King Lear, yet there has been little sc...
Revenge on the English stage has long been associated with Elizabethan and Renaissance revenge trage...
My dissertation considers how and why representations of female suffering in Restoration tragedy had...
In this dissertation, I argue that British verse tragedies of the Romantic era must be looked at not...
This dissertation reevaluates the role of early modern female libertines as sexual celebrities and a...
This dissertation explores how stage properties contribute to the enterprise of depicting the desire...
My thesis concerns libertine ideals of pleasure in English literature from the time of the Interregn...
My dissertation examines the portrayal of the coquettish character type on the Parisian stage from t...
This dissertation argues that seventeenth-century drama by women should be analyzed as a public disc...
The dissertation focuses on the relationship between political thinking and dramatic expression in t...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2014. Major: French. Advisor: Juliette Cherbuliez. ...
This project examines the changing emotional relationship between the English royal court and the pu...
This dissertation tracks representations of orators in a constellation of British texts throughout t...
If the Renaissance was the Golden Age of English comedy, the Restoration was the Silver. These comed...
This dissertation contends that guilds-folk in sixteenth-century England made their own changes to t...
The courtiers Edmund and Edgar are critical to the action of King Lear, yet there has been little sc...
Revenge on the English stage has long been associated with Elizabethan and Renaissance revenge trage...
My dissertation considers how and why representations of female suffering in Restoration tragedy had...
In this dissertation, I argue that British verse tragedies of the Romantic era must be looked at not...