Dramatic Geography

Dramatic Geography
Title Dramatic Geography PDF eBook
Author Laurence Publicover
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 219
Release 2017
Genre Drama
ISBN 0198806817

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Focusing on early modern plays which stage encounters between peoples of different cultures, the volume explores the ways in which early modern plays stage dramatic geography and how this has shaped literary and theatrical heritage.

Dramatic Geography

Dramatic Geography
Title Dramatic Geography PDF eBook
Author Laurence Publicover
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 224
Release 2017-09-15
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0192529730

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Focusing on early modern plays which stage encounters between peoples of different cultures, this book asks how a sense of geographical location was created in early modern theatres that featured minimal scenery. While previous studies have stressed these plays' connections to a historical Mediterranean in which England was increasingly involved, this volume demonstrates how their dramatic geography was shaped through a literary and theatrical heritage. Reading canonical plays including The Merchant of Venice, The Jew of Malta, and The Tempest alongside lesser-known dramas such as Soliman and Perseda, Guy of Warwick, and The Travels of the Three English Brothers, Dramatic Geography illustrates how early modern dramatists staging foreign worlds drew upon a romance tradition dating back to the medieval period, and how they responded to one another's plays to create an 'intertheatrical geography'. These strategies shape the plays' wider meanings in important ways, and could only have operated within the theatrical environment peculiar to early modern London: one in which playwrights worked in close proximity, in one instance perhaps even living together while composing Mediterranean dramas, and one where they could expect audiences to respond to subtle generic and intertextual negotiations. In reassessing this group of plays, Laurence Publicover brings into conversation scholarship on theatre history, cultural encounter, and literary geography; the book also contributes to current debates in early modern studies regarding the nature of dramatic authorship, the relationship between genre and history, and the continuities that run between the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Staging Place

Staging Place
Title Staging Place PDF eBook
Author Una Chaudhuri
Publisher University of Michigan Press
Total Pages 330
Release 1997
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780472065899

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The first book-length study of the notion of place and its implications in modern drama

Playing the Globe

Playing the Globe
Title Playing the Globe PDF eBook
Author John Gillies
Publisher Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Total Pages 308
Release 1998
Genre Drama
ISBN 9780838637395

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The essays collected here explore the representation of contemporary cartographic knowledge within a variety of English Renaissance dramatic texts. Including a preface and introduction that contextualize English cartographic awareness in the late sixteenth century, Playing the Globe provides a wide-ranging exploration of the rich variety of mental maps that shaped England's attitudes toward itself and others and continues to affect the ways in which the Anglo-American world imagines itself.

The Teaching of Geography

The Teaching of Geography
Title The Teaching of Geography PDF eBook
Author Mendel Everett Branom
Publisher
Total Pages 312
Release 1921
Genre Geography
ISBN

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the Teaching of Geography

the Teaching of Geography
Title the Teaching of Geography PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 310
Release 1921
Genre
ISBN

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The Cultural Geography of Early Modern Drama, 1620–1650

The Cultural Geography of Early Modern Drama, 1620–1650
Title The Cultural Geography of Early Modern Drama, 1620–1650 PDF eBook
Author Julie Sanders
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 255
Release 2011-05-26
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1139497340

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Literary geographies is an exciting new area of interdisciplinary research. Innovative and engaging, this book applies theories of landscape, space and place from the discipline of cultural geography within an early modern historical context. Different kinds of drama and performance are analysed: from commercial drama by key playwrights to household masques and entertainment performed by families and in semi-official contexts. Sanders provides a fresh look at works from the careers of Ben Jonson, John Milton and Richard Brome, paying attention to geographical spaces and habitats like forests, coastlines and arctic landscapes of ice and snow, as well as the more familiar locales of early modern country estates and city streets and spaces. Overall, the book encourages readers to think about geography as kinetic, embodied and physical, not least in its literary configurations, presenting a key contribution to early modern scholarship.