Elizabeth Cary’s play, The Tragedy of Mariam (1613), culminates with the execution by beheading of the play’s protagonist on the orders of her husband, the tyrannical Herod the Great. By executing Mariam, Herod attempts to re-establish his authority in Jerusalem after a rumour of his death has unleashed a wave of resistance and instability across his state. This article focuses upon the choice of beheading as the mode of execution and argues that the play’s biblical setting invites comparisons with Old Testament representations of beheading (including those in the stories of David and Judith). These beheadings occur as part of narratives of resistance against tyranny and overbearing patriarchs. The article argues that Herod’s attempts to ha...
Thomas Dekker and Philip Massinger's protestant saint’s play, The Virgin Martyr (1620), repres...
Sacrificial Acts: Martyrdom and Nationhood in Seventeenth-Century Drama posits that the importance o...
In the wake of the execution of Charles I, a few Englishwomen either denounced (like John Milton) th...
This paper explores androcentric symbolism of the heretical woman as a literary topos to justify mal...
Giving voice to women who suffer the brunt of masculine anxieties, The Tragedy of Mariam privileges ...
In early modern England, state beheadings were carefully codified, reserved for the nobility and tho...
Beheading is not an uncommon undertaking. As a particularized physical violence, it has been practi...
Judith beheads Holofernes – the provocative nature of the story related in the Book of Judith is imm...
This article argues that the medieval English Lazarus plays attempt to resolve the inherent oppositi...
This article argues that the medieval English Lazarus plays attempt to resolve the inherent oppositi...
The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) is the first original play by a woman to be published in England, and i...
At first glance, the medieval Corpus Christi plays from N-Town, Wakefield, and York detailing the ev...
This paper explores how, in the context of medieval memory-work, reading the Morte constitutes ethic...
This thesis examines Elizabeth Cary’s use of the Chorus in The Tragedy of Mariam (pub. 1613). Imitat...
Audiences and critics, spanning from the play\u27s debut to modern renditions, find Cordelia\u27s de...
Thomas Dekker and Philip Massinger's protestant saint’s play, The Virgin Martyr (1620), repres...
Sacrificial Acts: Martyrdom and Nationhood in Seventeenth-Century Drama posits that the importance o...
In the wake of the execution of Charles I, a few Englishwomen either denounced (like John Milton) th...
This paper explores androcentric symbolism of the heretical woman as a literary topos to justify mal...
Giving voice to women who suffer the brunt of masculine anxieties, The Tragedy of Mariam privileges ...
In early modern England, state beheadings were carefully codified, reserved for the nobility and tho...
Beheading is not an uncommon undertaking. As a particularized physical violence, it has been practi...
Judith beheads Holofernes – the provocative nature of the story related in the Book of Judith is imm...
This article argues that the medieval English Lazarus plays attempt to resolve the inherent oppositi...
This article argues that the medieval English Lazarus plays attempt to resolve the inherent oppositi...
The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) is the first original play by a woman to be published in England, and i...
At first glance, the medieval Corpus Christi plays from N-Town, Wakefield, and York detailing the ev...
This paper explores how, in the context of medieval memory-work, reading the Morte constitutes ethic...
This thesis examines Elizabeth Cary’s use of the Chorus in The Tragedy of Mariam (pub. 1613). Imitat...
Audiences and critics, spanning from the play\u27s debut to modern renditions, find Cordelia\u27s de...
Thomas Dekker and Philip Massinger's protestant saint’s play, The Virgin Martyr (1620), repres...
Sacrificial Acts: Martyrdom and Nationhood in Seventeenth-Century Drama posits that the importance o...
In the wake of the execution of Charles I, a few Englishwomen either denounced (like John Milton) th...