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Spectacle and Public Performance in the Late Middle Ages and the Renaissance

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No volume about the spectacles and public performances of early modern England could pretend to treat comprehensively a body of materials so conspicuously vast. Rather than efforts to survey the te...
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  • 28 February 2006
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No volume about the spectacles and public performances of early modern England could pretend to treat comprehensively a body of materials so conspicuously vast. Rather than efforts to survey the territory, these essays are best understood in the original sense of the term as “essays”—as trials, attempts, experiments to open alternative ways of understanding that vast corpus of mystery plays, civic pageants, court masques and professional dramas that constitute its subject. The book crosses traditional period lines, including studies of Medieval as well as Renaissance entertainments. Once more, the essays are not organized according to a single critical or historical methodology. They employ an eclectic range of interpretive practices, reflecting the variety of interpretive approaches now current in the field.

Contributors include: Tiffany J. Alkan, Robert W. Barrett, Jr., Sarah Beckwith, Tom Bishop, Peter Cockett, Richard K. Emmerson, Peter Holland, Nora Johnson, Richard C. McCoy, Lauren Shohet, and Robert E. Stillman.
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Price: $168.00
Pages: 262
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Publication Date: 28 February 2006
ISBN: 9789004149281
Format: Hardcover
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Probably the greatest virtue of this collection is the diversity of phenomena that it brings within the compass of spectacle and performance.
(…) individually and collectively, these essays unquestionably challenge and advance our understanding of late medieval and early modern performance.
Jonathan Walker, Renaissance Quarterly
Robert E. Stillman, Ph.D (1979) in English, University of Pennsylvania, is Professor of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He has published widely on the literature and culture of the English Renaissance, and is completing a new book about Sidney's poetics.