This dissertation examines the role of the stage in cultural debate about revenge in early modern England. The theme of retribution was hugely popular in early modern drama, at a time when the emerging nation state sought to strengthen its sovereignty by monopolizing the right to punish. The stage's wide array of representations of revenge shaped the ways in which early modern culture thought about revenge. Unlike previous literary criticism, which debated whether an Elizabethan audience approved or disapproved of acts of revenge and whether these dramatic performances would have strengthened or subverted the power of the state, Kristine Steenbergh is interested in points of conflict and shifts in thinking on revenge in the period. Sh...
This thesis argues that in seventeenth century England, the tongue, or more specifically the female ...
The adaptations of Shakespeare‘s plays that were written and staged during the English Restoration a...
This thesis explores women’s anger in Shakespeare’s plays. Anger, and its intensive form, rage can e...
The first book-length attempt to set the generic parameters of early modern revenge tragedy was also...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
This dissertation explores the construction of masculine identity at the intersection between early ...
This thesis offers a materialist account of dramatic genre. It shows how English revenge tragedies w...
Early modern revenge plays explore the underbelly of contemporary discourses on family and state as ...
This doctoral thesis looks anew at the representation of women in the non-Shakespearean plays of ear...
The revenge- and poison- filled tragedies of seventeenth century England astound audiences with thei...
This dissertation examines the role of "acceptable" feminine violence in Restoration and eighteenth-...
This dissertation analyzes the effects of publication on Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. The dramati...
Through a close reading of the key topoi in early modern revenge tragedy, this thesis investigates t...
Taking a feminist-historicist approach, this thesis analyses representations of rape in the period 1...
Early modern English revenge plays often reach a climax when vengeance is carried out in a masque. T...
This thesis argues that in seventeenth century England, the tongue, or more specifically the female ...
The adaptations of Shakespeare‘s plays that were written and staged during the English Restoration a...
This thesis explores women’s anger in Shakespeare’s plays. Anger, and its intensive form, rage can e...
The first book-length attempt to set the generic parameters of early modern revenge tragedy was also...
This project explores Renaissance revenge tragedy's conspicuous theatricality in light of the genre'...
This dissertation explores the construction of masculine identity at the intersection between early ...
This thesis offers a materialist account of dramatic genre. It shows how English revenge tragedies w...
Early modern revenge plays explore the underbelly of contemporary discourses on family and state as ...
This doctoral thesis looks anew at the representation of women in the non-Shakespearean plays of ear...
The revenge- and poison- filled tragedies of seventeenth century England astound audiences with thei...
This dissertation examines the role of "acceptable" feminine violence in Restoration and eighteenth-...
This dissertation analyzes the effects of publication on Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. The dramati...
Through a close reading of the key topoi in early modern revenge tragedy, this thesis investigates t...
Taking a feminist-historicist approach, this thesis analyses representations of rape in the period 1...
Early modern English revenge plays often reach a climax when vengeance is carried out in a masque. T...
This thesis argues that in seventeenth century England, the tongue, or more specifically the female ...
The adaptations of Shakespeare‘s plays that were written and staged during the English Restoration a...
This thesis explores women’s anger in Shakespeare’s plays. Anger, and its intensive form, rage can e...