The paper looks at the way in which the notion of queenship - in connection or in contrast with that of kingship and royalty in general - is reflected in Shakespeare’s historical tetralogies and in Henry VIII. It is argued that all royal figures, male and female, featured in these plays, are presented by Shakespeare in accordance not only with Tudor historiography, but also with Elizabeth I’s own strategies of self-representation. Thus, the major notions to be looked into are virtue, legitimacy, agency, as well as, more generally, early modern religious and political issues concerning gender relation
This dissertation examines a series of specific problems affecting England's queens regnant, which a...
This project concerns the ways in which Shakespearean literature becomes translated into political t...
Much as they usually move in a restricted circle and deal only with their consort and a few royal ad...
Renaissance England is often discussed in the context of theatre and theatrical acting. The fact is...
This paper is about how the image of Elizabethan monarch was constructed as a sacred figure and how ...
The theory of the king’s two bodies was a mid-16th century political theory articulated in the Inns ...
The aim of this paper is to delineate the representation of kingship in Tudor and Stuart England and...
This thesis analyses how early modern English history plays deploy representations of ‘unquiet’ medi...
This thesis seeks to examine not any single theory of kingship in Shakespeare's 'Henriad', but the ...
Queen Elizabeth I\u27s writing is contextually significant; it represents not only Elizabeth\u27s th...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
Of Shakespeare\u27s thirty-seven plays, fifteen include queens. This collection gives these characte...
This thesis focuses on Shakespeare’s representations of female leaders, studying his queen character...
Staging Power in Tudor and Stuart English History Plays examines the changing ideological conception...
The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries witnessed a striking event in European monarchies: four quee...
This dissertation examines a series of specific problems affecting England's queens regnant, which a...
This project concerns the ways in which Shakespearean literature becomes translated into political t...
Much as they usually move in a restricted circle and deal only with their consort and a few royal ad...
Renaissance England is often discussed in the context of theatre and theatrical acting. The fact is...
This paper is about how the image of Elizabethan monarch was constructed as a sacred figure and how ...
The theory of the king’s two bodies was a mid-16th century political theory articulated in the Inns ...
The aim of this paper is to delineate the representation of kingship in Tudor and Stuart England and...
This thesis analyses how early modern English history plays deploy representations of ‘unquiet’ medi...
This thesis seeks to examine not any single theory of kingship in Shakespeare's 'Henriad', but the ...
Queen Elizabeth I\u27s writing is contextually significant; it represents not only Elizabeth\u27s th...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
Of Shakespeare\u27s thirty-seven plays, fifteen include queens. This collection gives these characte...
This thesis focuses on Shakespeare’s representations of female leaders, studying his queen character...
Staging Power in Tudor and Stuart English History Plays examines the changing ideological conception...
The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries witnessed a striking event in European monarchies: four quee...
This dissertation examines a series of specific problems affecting England's queens regnant, which a...
This project concerns the ways in which Shakespearean literature becomes translated into political t...
Much as they usually move in a restricted circle and deal only with their consort and a few royal ad...