This article examines a civic entertainment staged in Chester in 1610. It explores how visual, verbal, and aural elements of the event contributed to its construction of popular and elite responses, revealing complex circuits of representation. Multiple elements of identity overlap in the show’s portrayal of Chester’s place in Jacobean Britain. A discussion of different textual forms, contexts, musical resources, constructions of authorship, and evidence of reception associated with the event elucidates this portrayal. We must examine the non-verbal elements, especially music, alongside the verbal elements of occasional drama, if we are to fully recognize the complexity of their strategies of representation
The cycle plays are usually taken to be the exemplar form for civic and guild-sponsored drama in cit...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
This article examines a civic entertainment staged in Chester in 1610. It explores how visual, verba...
Play Texts and Public Practice in the Chester Cycle, 1422-1607 investigates how the Chester cycle`s ...
This essay focuses on the performances of children in late medieval and early modern Chester, using ...
This study explores the cultural implications of theatrical performance in early modern England. Eve...
The essays opens by demonstrating how sound is thematic in the Tapiters' and Couchers' pageant of Ch...
This thesis argues that Saturnalian festival practice is central to the representation of both verna...
This thesis explores incidental music written to accompany tableaux vivants in London Shakespeare pr...
This paper discusses the role of sound during triumphal entries in Edinburgh, and the creation of a ...
Sensitivity to the Chester Shepherds’ soundedness in performance reveals that its climactic action, ...
'Pageantry and Power' is the first full and in-depth cultural history of the Lord Mayor's Show in th...
The staging of civic pageantry dramatically altered the soundscape of a city, replacing everyday sou...
This article argues that, in the early seventeenth century, rhetorical devices and stage devices ove...
The cycle plays are usually taken to be the exemplar form for civic and guild-sponsored drama in cit...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
This article examines a civic entertainment staged in Chester in 1610. It explores how visual, verba...
Play Texts and Public Practice in the Chester Cycle, 1422-1607 investigates how the Chester cycle`s ...
This essay focuses on the performances of children in late medieval and early modern Chester, using ...
This study explores the cultural implications of theatrical performance in early modern England. Eve...
The essays opens by demonstrating how sound is thematic in the Tapiters' and Couchers' pageant of Ch...
This thesis argues that Saturnalian festival practice is central to the representation of both verna...
This thesis explores incidental music written to accompany tableaux vivants in London Shakespeare pr...
This paper discusses the role of sound during triumphal entries in Edinburgh, and the creation of a ...
Sensitivity to the Chester Shepherds’ soundedness in performance reveals that its climactic action, ...
'Pageantry and Power' is the first full and in-depth cultural history of the Lord Mayor's Show in th...
The staging of civic pageantry dramatically altered the soundscape of a city, replacing everyday sou...
This article argues that, in the early seventeenth century, rhetorical devices and stage devices ove...
The cycle plays are usually taken to be the exemplar form for civic and guild-sponsored drama in cit...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...