This essay challenges the traditional historical narrative of character focused on Shakespeare’s epochal “inward turn.” It offers an alternative history that re-shapes the story of character around the cultural and commercial impact of so-called “non-Shakespearean” and “pre-modern” characters. Investigating intersections between the neo-Theophrastan “Character,” commercial drama, and news culture in seventeenth-century England, the essay traces the augmentation of character as a word and concept. Character was a key noun and verb in a shifting lexicon of identity, a new generic brand pioneered and appropriated by Ben Jonson and John Webster, and a rhetorical technology for estranging and trade-marking forms of humanity.The essay argues that...
This article explores a number of perspectives on the creation of very different Shakespeares as per...
This thesis explores the process wherein the audience either rejects or assimilates new literary ite...
Character’s Theatre: Genre and Identity on the Eighteenth-Century English Stage (Lisa A. Freeman
This essay challenges the traditional historical narrative of character focused on Shakespeare’s epo...
This dissertation focuses on practices of stock characterisation as they are represented in literatu...
The purpose of my research was to answer a simple question: “What can be said about Hamlet\u27s char...
This thesis discusses Ben Jonson’s innovative concept of character as an effect of interactions in d...
This thesis re-examines Shakespeare’s creation of tragic character through the concept of ‘arrivals’...
This thesis re-examines Shakespeare’s creation of tragic character through the concept of ‘arrivals’...
421 pagesThis dissertation argues that early modern English authors forged a new sense of literary c...
This PhD aims to investigate the development of a character type, referred to in this thesis as the ...
The intent of the study is to contextualize the seventeenth-century English prose character as a sig...
Shakespeare’s immense cultural value can be seen by the numerous book, movie, and internet reference...
The essay examines current thinking on early modern authorship within the competitive economies of t...
This article investigates the cultural assumptions which underpin five twentieth and twenty-first ce...
This article explores a number of perspectives on the creation of very different Shakespeares as per...
This thesis explores the process wherein the audience either rejects or assimilates new literary ite...
Character’s Theatre: Genre and Identity on the Eighteenth-Century English Stage (Lisa A. Freeman
This essay challenges the traditional historical narrative of character focused on Shakespeare’s epo...
This dissertation focuses on practices of stock characterisation as they are represented in literatu...
The purpose of my research was to answer a simple question: “What can be said about Hamlet\u27s char...
This thesis discusses Ben Jonson’s innovative concept of character as an effect of interactions in d...
This thesis re-examines Shakespeare’s creation of tragic character through the concept of ‘arrivals’...
This thesis re-examines Shakespeare’s creation of tragic character through the concept of ‘arrivals’...
421 pagesThis dissertation argues that early modern English authors forged a new sense of literary c...
This PhD aims to investigate the development of a character type, referred to in this thesis as the ...
The intent of the study is to contextualize the seventeenth-century English prose character as a sig...
Shakespeare’s immense cultural value can be seen by the numerous book, movie, and internet reference...
The essay examines current thinking on early modern authorship within the competitive economies of t...
This article investigates the cultural assumptions which underpin five twentieth and twenty-first ce...
This article explores a number of perspectives on the creation of very different Shakespeares as per...
This thesis explores the process wherein the audience either rejects or assimilates new literary ite...
Character’s Theatre: Genre and Identity on the Eighteenth-Century English Stage (Lisa A. Freeman