My thesis explores Restoration repertory theatre in the 1670-71 season, examining all of the new and revived works performed, including the premières of plays by dramatists such as Behn, Dryden, Shadwell, and Wycherley. These canonical writers are studied alongside the lesser-known works of playwrights including John Crowne, Edward Howard, Elizabeth Polwhele, and Elkanah Settle. Offering new readings of neglected plays by resituating them within their theatrical, literary, and political contexts, I use contemporary evidence from diaries, letters, pamphlets, and parliamentary records to demonstrate how theatre was inextricably bound with wider circumstances. Tracing the interaction between the playhouses, print, manuscript, and court culture...
The object of this study has been to present as complete a picture of the Salisbury Court theatre as...
This thesis examines how the concept of honour functioned as a part of political discourse during th...
After the theaters reopened in the 1660s, most of the plays that were popular represented the audien...
Inheriting the Stage: Pre-Interregnum Drama in the Restoration is a study of the intersection of Res...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
This thesis explores the representation of the early modern English state in a selection of drama pe...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
This thesis is a systematic investigation of the Royal Shakespeare Company's productions of all the ...
This thesis is a systematic investigation of the Royal Shakespeare Company's productions of all the ...
A Play Without a Stage: English Renaissance Drama, 1642 to 1660, focuses on the production of early ...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
Though much worthy scholarship exists about English Restoration theatre, few studies examine the int...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2016. Major: English. Advisors: Katherine Scheil, J...
The purpose of this thesis will be to examine how two acts of rebellion against Queen Elizabeth I in...
The book explores the representation of kingship on the English Restoration stage. In the early year...
The object of this study has been to present as complete a picture of the Salisbury Court theatre as...
This thesis examines how the concept of honour functioned as a part of political discourse during th...
After the theaters reopened in the 1660s, most of the plays that were popular represented the audien...
Inheriting the Stage: Pre-Interregnum Drama in the Restoration is a study of the intersection of Res...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
This thesis explores the representation of the early modern English state in a selection of drama pe...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
This thesis is a systematic investigation of the Royal Shakespeare Company's productions of all the ...
This thesis is a systematic investigation of the Royal Shakespeare Company's productions of all the ...
A Play Without a Stage: English Renaissance Drama, 1642 to 1660, focuses on the production of early ...
My dissertation draws on recent methodological and theoretical developments in social history in ord...
Though much worthy scholarship exists about English Restoration theatre, few studies examine the int...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2016. Major: English. Advisors: Katherine Scheil, J...
The purpose of this thesis will be to examine how two acts of rebellion against Queen Elizabeth I in...
The book explores the representation of kingship on the English Restoration stage. In the early year...
The object of this study has been to present as complete a picture of the Salisbury Court theatre as...
This thesis examines how the concept of honour functioned as a part of political discourse during th...
After the theaters reopened in the 1660s, most of the plays that were popular represented the audien...