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Comic Drama in the Low Countries, c.1450-1560
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Text and translation of comic plays sheds light on a fascinating era of theatrical production.`[Opens] up an entirely new corpus of texts for scholars and readers familar with and interested in Eur...
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15 March 2012

Text and translation of comic plays sheds light on a fascinating era of theatrical production.
`[Opens] up an entirely new corpus of texts for scholars and readers familar with and interested in European dramatic texts from this period, but who have heretofore not had access to them due to the language barrier.' Professor David F. Johnson, Florida State University, Tallahassee
During the Middle Ages and early modern period, a dramatic culture of astonishing vitality developed in the Low Countries. Owing to the activities of organisationsknown as rederijkerskamers, or "chambers of rhetoric", drama became a central aspect of public life in the cities of the Netherlands. The comedies produced by these groups are particularly interesting. Drawing their forms and narratives from folklore and popular ritual, and entertaining in their own right, they also bring together a range of important concerns; they respond directly to some of the key developments in the period, reflecting the political and religious turmoil of the Reformation and Dutch Revolt, the emergence of humanism, and the appearance of an early capitalist economy.
This collection brings together the original Middle Dutch text of ten of these comic plays, with facing translation into modern English. The selection is divided evenly between formal stage-plays and monologues, and provides a representation of the full range of rederijker drama, from the sophisticatedFarce of the Fisherman, with its sly undermining of audience expectation, to the hearty scatology of A Mock-Sermon on Saint Nobody, and the grim gallows humour of The Farce of the Beggar. An introduction and notes place the plays in their context and elucidate difficulties of interpretation.
Ben Parsons is Teaching Fellow at the University of Leicester; Bas Jongenelen is teacher of Dutch Literature at Fontys Lerarenopleidingin Tilburg.
`[Opens] up an entirely new corpus of texts for scholars and readers familar with and interested in European dramatic texts from this period, but who have heretofore not had access to them due to the language barrier.' Professor David F. Johnson, Florida State University, Tallahassee
During the Middle Ages and early modern period, a dramatic culture of astonishing vitality developed in the Low Countries. Owing to the activities of organisationsknown as rederijkerskamers, or "chambers of rhetoric", drama became a central aspect of public life in the cities of the Netherlands. The comedies produced by these groups are particularly interesting. Drawing their forms and narratives from folklore and popular ritual, and entertaining in their own right, they also bring together a range of important concerns; they respond directly to some of the key developments in the period, reflecting the political and religious turmoil of the Reformation and Dutch Revolt, the emergence of humanism, and the appearance of an early capitalist economy.
This collection brings together the original Middle Dutch text of ten of these comic plays, with facing translation into modern English. The selection is divided evenly between formal stage-plays and monologues, and provides a representation of the full range of rederijker drama, from the sophisticatedFarce of the Fisherman, with its sly undermining of audience expectation, to the hearty scatology of A Mock-Sermon on Saint Nobody, and the grim gallows humour of The Farce of the Beggar. An introduction and notes place the plays in their context and elucidate difficulties of interpretation.
Ben Parsons is Teaching Fellow at the University of Leicester; Bas Jongenelen is teacher of Dutch Literature at Fontys Lerarenopleidingin Tilburg.
Price: $130.00
Pages: 308
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: D.S.Brewer
Publication Date:
15 March 2012
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781843842910
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY COLLECTIONS / Medieval, Ancient, classical and medieval texts, DRAMA / Medieval, DRAMA / European / General, Classic and pre-20th century plays
This volume is a rich source for getting acquainted with the vast comic literature of the Low Countries, providing material and thought for further study and, in so doing (and who could gainsay the benefit of that?), making us readers laugh.
Translators' Note
Introduction: The Older the Hollander the More Foolish: Comedy, Foolery and the Chambers of Rhetoric in the Medieval Low Countries
Part I: Dramatic Monologues
This is the Madness
The Guild of the Blue Barge
A Mock Sermon on Saint Nobody
The Oath of Master Pawnbroker
A Wise and Wonderful Prognostication
Part II: Farces
The Farce of the Beggar
A Play of Three Lovers
The Farce of the Fisherman
Jack Sweet-tooth
A Farce of the Barefoot Brothers
Bibliography
Introduction: The Older the Hollander the More Foolish: Comedy, Foolery and the Chambers of Rhetoric in the Medieval Low Countries
Part I: Dramatic Monologues
This is the Madness
The Guild of the Blue Barge
A Mock Sermon on Saint Nobody
The Oath of Master Pawnbroker
A Wise and Wonderful Prognostication
Part II: Farces
The Farce of the Beggar
A Play of Three Lovers
The Farce of the Fisherman
Jack Sweet-tooth
A Farce of the Barefoot Brothers
Bibliography