How does one reach the hearts of others? This thesis situates the question in early modern England by investigating the activity of persuasion on the commercial stage, contending that, when plays sought to represent persuasion or be persuasive themselves, many of their tactics were borrowed from religious sources. The ongoing process of Reformation in England required an investment in persuasive methods for the purposes of religious education and conversion. Protestant reform may have instigated the persuasive practices, but the ensuing heterogeneity of belief enabled multiple confessional perspectives to compete for hearts and minds, creating a “culture of persuasion” that profoundly influenced early modern modes of communication, includin...
My thesis contends that in sixteenth century English drama there were considerable changes in the dr...
International audienceThe subject of this volume presents a particular historical interest in the En...
In "Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London," I argue that the specific working practice...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020No concept in post-Reformation England was more fraugh...
My dissertation investigates religious conversion in late medieval East Anglian drama (c. 1400–1500)...
This dissertation provides a comprehensive and cross-religious analysis of representations of religi...
Biblical plays were widely popular in England from the late fourteenth to sixteenth centuries. Medie...
grantor: University of TorontoMuch past criticism of character in Middle English drama has...
“Performing Piety” examines the interdependent relationship between medieval sermons and plays in la...
In spite of the iconoclastic bent of the Lollards, the first English opponents to the Roman Church i...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines three dramatic monologues found in Old ...
Although the English Protestant reformers set out to destroy all vestiges of Catholic idolatry, publ...
Notions of the sacred and the profane took on a particular significance in late-sixteenth and early-...
This thesis centres on the presentation, with appropriate music, of some medieval religious drama be...
It is widely believed that for many years British theatre has developed out of an historical connect...
My thesis contends that in sixteenth century English drama there were considerable changes in the dr...
International audienceThe subject of this volume presents a particular historical interest in the En...
In "Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London," I argue that the specific working practice...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020No concept in post-Reformation England was more fraugh...
My dissertation investigates religious conversion in late medieval East Anglian drama (c. 1400–1500)...
This dissertation provides a comprehensive and cross-religious analysis of representations of religi...
Biblical plays were widely popular in England from the late fourteenth to sixteenth centuries. Medie...
grantor: University of TorontoMuch past criticism of character in Middle English drama has...
“Performing Piety” examines the interdependent relationship between medieval sermons and plays in la...
In spite of the iconoclastic bent of the Lollards, the first English opponents to the Roman Church i...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines three dramatic monologues found in Old ...
Although the English Protestant reformers set out to destroy all vestiges of Catholic idolatry, publ...
Notions of the sacred and the profane took on a particular significance in late-sixteenth and early-...
This thesis centres on the presentation, with appropriate music, of some medieval religious drama be...
It is widely believed that for many years British theatre has developed out of an historical connect...
My thesis contends that in sixteenth century English drama there were considerable changes in the dr...
International audienceThe subject of this volume presents a particular historical interest in the En...
In "Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London," I argue that the specific working practice...