Theatrical Convention and Audience Response in Early Modern Drama
This book gives a detailed and comprehensive survey of the diverse, theatrically vital formal conventions of the drama of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Besides providing readings of plays such as Hamlet, Othello, Merchant of Venice, and Titus Andronicus, it also places Shakespeare emphatically within his own theatrical context, and focuses on the relationship between the demanding repertory system of the time and the conventions and content of the plays. Lopez argues that the limitations of the relatively bare stage and non-naturalistic mode of early modern theatre would have made the potential for failure very great, and he proposes that understanding this potential for failure is crucial for understanding the way in which the drama succeeded on stage. The book offers perspectives on familiar conventions such as the pun, the aside and the expository speech; and it works toward a definition of early modern theatrical genres based on the relationship between these well-known conventions and the incoherent experience of early modern theatrical narratives.
- Comprehensive and detailed survey of formal conventions of all commercial English drama produced between 1585 and 1616
- Provides broad theatrical context within which to consider works of Shakespeare
- Considers theatrical vitality and viability of obscure early modern drama - not only as texts that were performed but as texts that can still be performed
Product details
January 2007Paperback
9780521032834
248 pages
228 × 151 × 17 mm
0.371kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I:
- 1. 'As it was acted to great applause': Elizabethan and Jacobean audiences and the physicality of response
- 2. Meat, magic and metamorphosis: on puns and wordplay
- 3. Managing the aside
- 4. Exposition, redundancy, action
- 5. Disorder and convention
- Part II: Introduction to Part II
- 6. Drama of disappointment: character and narrative in Elizabethan and Jacobean tragedy
- 7. Laughter and narrative in Elizabethan and Jacobean comedy
- 8. Epilogue: Jonson and Shakespeare
- Plays and editions cited
- Works cited
- Index.