This article explores how certain dramatists in early modern England and in Spain, specifically Ben Jonson and Miguel de Cervantes (with much more emphasis on the former), pursued authority over texts by claiming as their own a new realm which had not been available – or, more accurately, as prominently available – to playwrights before: the stage directions in printed plays. The way both these playwrights and/or their publishers dealt with the transcription of stage directions provides perhaps the clearest example of a theatrical convention translated into the realm of readership
In this study, Lukas Erne argues that Shakespeare, apart from being a playwright who wrote theatrica...
Though Jonson derived the epigraph for the title-page of Bartholomew Fair from Horace’s Epistles,1 t...
Ben Jonson’s Works, published in 1616, included all his comedies written that far, and meant an impo...
This article explores how certain dramatists in early modern England and in Spain, specifically Ben ...
What do 'stage directions' do in early modern drama? Who or what are they directing: action on the s...
Book synopsis: What do 'stage directions' do in early modern drama? Who or what are they directing: ...
The introduction of the modern director at the end of th4e nineteenth century had a major impact on ...
Stage directions are a special type of genre in theater, ranging from indications for the dramatic t...
Shakespeare has emerged as a dramatist who could make good use of his first-hand experience with act...
Stage directions in 17th-century printed copies of Calderón de la Barca’s La dama duende are much m...
Stage directions that defy singular interpretation and do not, in fact, direct staging have been und...
My thesis explores how early modern playwrights navigated the complicated, and often competing, dema...
Using the typographical arrangements of the dramatic page as a rich site of inquiry, this dissertati...
Often regarded as purely utilitarian messages with no artistic value in themselves, stage directions...
Early modern play-texts present numerous puzzles for scholars interested in ascertaining how plays w...
In this study, Lukas Erne argues that Shakespeare, apart from being a playwright who wrote theatrica...
Though Jonson derived the epigraph for the title-page of Bartholomew Fair from Horace’s Epistles,1 t...
Ben Jonson’s Works, published in 1616, included all his comedies written that far, and meant an impo...
This article explores how certain dramatists in early modern England and in Spain, specifically Ben ...
What do 'stage directions' do in early modern drama? Who or what are they directing: action on the s...
Book synopsis: What do 'stage directions' do in early modern drama? Who or what are they directing: ...
The introduction of the modern director at the end of th4e nineteenth century had a major impact on ...
Stage directions are a special type of genre in theater, ranging from indications for the dramatic t...
Shakespeare has emerged as a dramatist who could make good use of his first-hand experience with act...
Stage directions in 17th-century printed copies of Calderón de la Barca’s La dama duende are much m...
Stage directions that defy singular interpretation and do not, in fact, direct staging have been und...
My thesis explores how early modern playwrights navigated the complicated, and often competing, dema...
Using the typographical arrangements of the dramatic page as a rich site of inquiry, this dissertati...
Often regarded as purely utilitarian messages with no artistic value in themselves, stage directions...
Early modern play-texts present numerous puzzles for scholars interested in ascertaining how plays w...
In this study, Lukas Erne argues that Shakespeare, apart from being a playwright who wrote theatrica...
Though Jonson derived the epigraph for the title-page of Bartholomew Fair from Horace’s Epistles,1 t...
Ben Jonson’s Works, published in 1616, included all his comedies written that far, and meant an impo...