In late medieval English society the dead remained amongst the living through the Church’s all pervasive intercessory practices (memorial, commemorative, and liturgical services) to send succour to souls in Purgatory. In 1576 the Church of England officially dismissed the doctrine of Purgatory as an invented fiction and all intercessory services were abandoned effectively separating the living from the dead. Such cultural and religious changes were traumatic for many and even those who welcomed the reformed religion had to find new ways to remember the dead. My dissertation looks at four of Shakespeare’s great works (the Henry VI plays, Hamlet, Titus Andronicus, and Macbeth) and examines the ways in which, through performance, these play...
Semi-animate corpses, physically powerful ghosts, and natural looking statues serve a powerful metat...
In a comprehensive study of Hamlet and its reception, this dissertation offers a concept and interpr...
This dissertation will argue that the early modern theatre and the early modern church were both con...
The study of the body during the Renaissance became a critical focus in the 2000s. Works such as Mic...
This dissertation explores how late medieval and early modern English culture understood the possibi...
My dissertation examines representations of necrophilia in Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. From the ...
This study combines formal analysis of Shakespeare’s texts with an investigation of early modern Eng...
This study aims at offering a theological analysis of the representation of the afterlife in two maj...
The paper begins with an anecdote concerning one of most intriguing works of Frédéric Chopin, Noctur...
This thesis investigates the ways mourning was performed on the early modern stage. "Expressions of...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2016. Major: English. Advisors: Katherine Scheil, J...
The care and disposal of the dead bodies, an unavoidable reminder of one’s mortality, rarely receive...
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This thesis examines the ghostly collectives in William Shakespeare's Richard III and Cymbeline. It ...
This thesis focuses on the religious aspects of William Shakespeare's Hamlet which, I argue, form th...
Semi-animate corpses, physically powerful ghosts, and natural looking statues serve a powerful metat...
In a comprehensive study of Hamlet and its reception, this dissertation offers a concept and interpr...
This dissertation will argue that the early modern theatre and the early modern church were both con...
The study of the body during the Renaissance became a critical focus in the 2000s. Works such as Mic...
This dissertation explores how late medieval and early modern English culture understood the possibi...
My dissertation examines representations of necrophilia in Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. From the ...
This study combines formal analysis of Shakespeare’s texts with an investigation of early modern Eng...
This study aims at offering a theological analysis of the representation of the afterlife in two maj...
The paper begins with an anecdote concerning one of most intriguing works of Frédéric Chopin, Noctur...
This thesis investigates the ways mourning was performed on the early modern stage. "Expressions of...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2016. Major: English. Advisors: Katherine Scheil, J...
The care and disposal of the dead bodies, an unavoidable reminder of one’s mortality, rarely receive...
This thesis explores the notion that the emergent language of theatre, and more generally of modern ...
This thesis examines the ghostly collectives in William Shakespeare's Richard III and Cymbeline. It ...
This thesis focuses on the religious aspects of William Shakespeare's Hamlet which, I argue, form th...
Semi-animate corpses, physically powerful ghosts, and natural looking statues serve a powerful metat...
In a comprehensive study of Hamlet and its reception, this dissertation offers a concept and interpr...
This dissertation will argue that the early modern theatre and the early modern church were both con...