The 'Vice' — a corrupt character frequent in early English drama — engages in mischief ranging from the benignly annoying to the outright wicked. His activities typically include subterfuge that results in the seduction of the dramatic hero, other characters, and even members of the audience. Music is a frequent device in the Vice's project. From the standpoints of Baudrillard's theory of seduction and of sixteenth-century and contemporary perspectives on theatrical music, improvisation, acting, and ethopoieia, this essay explores the role of singing in what Robert Weimann and Douglas Bruster term the Vice's 'personation'. The effect of the Vice's musicality in the representation and achievement of seduction in plays from Mankind to Shakes...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
Two markedly similar conventional dramatic types emerged in the sixteenth century: the Vice in the E...
The aim of this thesis is twofold: 1. To investigate the cultural significance of Shakespearean the...
The 'Vice' — a corrupt character frequent in early English drama — engages in mischief r...
“Moving Music,” bridges the gap between the theory and the practice of music as it is represented in...
This thesis argues that Saturnalian festival practice is central to the representation of both verna...
This dissertation traces the development of verse with a musical dimension from Sidney and Shakespea...
One of the most puzzling thematic patterns prevalent in the literature of almost every culture is th...
Ballad opera, fathered by John Gay 1728 and propelled forward by Henry Fielding until 1736, capitali...
grantor: University of TorontoMy focus of study is the popular English moral interlude and...
Music in the early modern world was an art form fraught with tensions. Writers from a wide variety o...
The central concern of this thesis is the negotiation between the dichotomous qualities with which ~...
We have approached our study of the song in Elizabethan Drama with the intention of accounting for t...
This dissertation explores dramatic music as it refers to the Elizabethan world. It discusses works ...
The featuring of mad characters on the English stage can be traced as far back as the first dramatic...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
Two markedly similar conventional dramatic types emerged in the sixteenth century: the Vice in the E...
The aim of this thesis is twofold: 1. To investigate the cultural significance of Shakespearean the...
The 'Vice' — a corrupt character frequent in early English drama — engages in mischief r...
“Moving Music,” bridges the gap between the theory and the practice of music as it is represented in...
This thesis argues that Saturnalian festival practice is central to the representation of both verna...
This dissertation traces the development of verse with a musical dimension from Sidney and Shakespea...
One of the most puzzling thematic patterns prevalent in the literature of almost every culture is th...
Ballad opera, fathered by John Gay 1728 and propelled forward by Henry Fielding until 1736, capitali...
grantor: University of TorontoMy focus of study is the popular English moral interlude and...
Music in the early modern world was an art form fraught with tensions. Writers from a wide variety o...
The central concern of this thesis is the negotiation between the dichotomous qualities with which ~...
We have approached our study of the song in Elizabethan Drama with the intention of accounting for t...
This dissertation explores dramatic music as it refers to the Elizabethan world. It discusses works ...
The featuring of mad characters on the English stage can be traced as far back as the first dramatic...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
Two markedly similar conventional dramatic types emerged in the sixteenth century: the Vice in the E...
The aim of this thesis is twofold: 1. To investigate the cultural significance of Shakespearean the...