Closet Drama

Closet Drama
Author: Catherine Burroughs
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2018-09-03
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 135160693X

Closet Drama: History, Theory, Form introduces the emerging field of Closet Drama Studies by featuring twelve original essays from distinguished scholars who offer fresh and illuminating perspectives on closet drama as a genre. Examining an unusual mix of historical narratives, performances, and texts from the Renaissance to the present, this collection unleashes a provocative array of theoretical concerns about the phenomenon of the closet play—a dramatic text written for reading rather than acting.

Privacy, Playreading, and Women's Closet Drama, 1550-1700

Privacy, Playreading, and Women's Closet Drama, 1550-1700
Author: Marta Straznicky
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2004-11-25
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780521841245

Marta Straznicky offers a detailed historical analysis of early modern women's closet plays: plays explicitly written for reading, rather than public performance. She reveals that such works were part of an alternative dramatic tradition, an elite and private literary culture, which was understood as intellectually superior to and politically more radical than commercial drama. Elizabeth Cary, Jane Lumley, Anne Finch and Margaret Cavendish wrote their plays in this conjunction of the public and the private at a time when male playwrights dominated the theatres. In her astute readings of the texts, their contexts and their physical appearance in print or manuscript, Straznicky has produced many fresh insights into the place of women's closet plays both in the history of women's writing and in the history of English drama.

Uncloseting Drama

Uncloseting Drama
Author: Nick Salvato
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 319
Release: 2010-10-26
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0300160178

In this work modernism is illuminated through little-known but striking works by Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein and others who revived the closet drama, plays written largely for private reading as a means of exploring forbidden sexualities.

Dramatic Difference

Dramatic Difference
Author: Karen Raber
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Total Pages: 356
Release: 2001
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780874137576

"Dramatic Difference offers an important contribution to the study of early modern women writers, and at the same time invites scholars and critics of the theater to reassess the place of closet drama - and the presence of women dramatists - in the early modern dramatic tradition."--BOOK JACKET.

The Lines Between the Lines

The Lines Between the Lines
Author: Bess Rowen
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2021-10-18
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0472126334

What is the purpose of a stage direction? These italicized lines written in between the lines of spoken dialogue tell us a great deal of information about a play's genre, mood, tone, visual setting, cast of characters, and more. Yet generations of actors have been taught to cross these words out as records of previous performances or signs of overly controlling playwrights, while scholars have either treated them as problems to be solved or as silent lines of dialogue. Stage directions can be all of these things, and yet there are examples from over one-hundred years of American playwriting that show that stage directions can also be so much more. The Lines Between the Lines focuses on how playwrights have written stage directions that engage readers, production team members, and scholars in a process of embodied creation in order to determine meaning. Author Bess Rowen calls the products of this method “affective stage directions” because they reach out from the page and affect the bodies of those who encounter them. Affective stage directions do not tell a reader or production team what a given moment looks like, but rather how a moment feels. In this way, these stage directions provide playgrounds for individual readers or production teams to make sense of a given moment in a play based on their own individual cultural experience, geographic location, and identity-markers. Affective stage directions enable us to check our assumptions about what kinds of bodies are represented on stage, allowing for a greater multitude of voices and kinds of embodied identity to make their own interpretations of a play while still following the text exactly. The tools provided in this book are as useful for the theater scholar as they are for the theater audience member, casting director, and actor. Each chapter covers a different function of stage directions (spoken, affective, choreographic, multivalent, impossible) and looks at it through a different practical lens (focusing on actors, directors, designers, dramaturgs, and readers). Every embodied person will have a slightly different understanding of affective stage directions, and it is precisely this diversity that makes these stage directions crucial to understanding theater in our time.

British and American Drama (English Book)

British and American Drama (English Book)
Author: Dr. Sangeeta Arora
Publisher: Thakur Publication Private Limited
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2023-07-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9354804675

Discover the captivating world of British and American Drama with our comprehensive e-Book designed for B.A. 3rd Semester students at U.P. State Universities. Aligned with the common syllabus of NEP-2020, this engaging resource offers in-depth insights and analysis of iconic plays, characters, and themes from both British and American theatrical traditions. Elevate your understanding of Drama and excel in your studies with this essential e-Book.

Tragedies of the English Renaissance

Tragedies of the English Renaissance
Author: Goran Stanivukovic
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2018-02-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1474419577

A survey of modern cinematic and televisual responses to the concept of the golden age.

Theatrical Milton

Theatrical Milton
Author: Brendan Prawdzik
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2017-04-18
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1474421024

Theatrical Milton brings coherence to the presence of theatre in John Milton through the concept of theatricality. In this book, 'theatricality' identifies a discursive field entailing the rhetorical strategies and effects of framing a given human action, including speech and writing, as an act of theatre. Political and theological cultures in seventeenth-century England developed a treasury of representational resources in order to stage-to satirize and, above all, to de-legitimate-rhetors of politics, religion, and print. At the core of Milton's works is a contradictory relation to theatre that has neither been explained nor properly explored. This book changes the terms of scholarly discussion and discovers how the social structures of theatre afforded Milton resources for poetic and polemical representation and uncovers the precise contours of Milton's interest in theatre and drama.

The Performing Century

The Performing Century
Author: T. Davis
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2015-12-17
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0230589480

This book looks at modes of performance and forms of theatre in Nineteenth-century Britain and Ireland. On subjects as varied as the vogue for fairy plays to the representation of economics to the work of a parliamentary committee in regulating theatres, the authors redefine what theatre and performance in the Nineteenth century might be.

A Companion to Early Modern Hispanic Theater

A Companion to Early Modern Hispanic Theater
Author: Hilaire Kallendorf
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2014-02-20
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9004263012

A panoramic, state-of-the-art handbook destined to chart a course for future work in the field of early modern Hispanic theater studies. It begins in the closet with an essay on Celestina as closet drama and moves out into the court to explore intersections with courtly love. An essay on the comedia and the classics demonstrates this genre’s firm grounding in the classical tradition, despite Lope de Vega’s famous protestations to the contrary. Distinct but related genres such as the autos sacramentales and the entremeses also make an appearance. The traditional themes of honor and wife-murder share the stage with less familiar topics like the incorporation of animals into performance. This volume covers the urban space of the city in Spain and Portugal as well as uncharted territories in the New World and Japan. Essays on emblems and the picaresque round out this anthology, along with studies of theatrical representations of early modern innovations in science and technology. The book concludes with two different psychoanalytical approaches, focused on melancholy and Lacanian tragedy, respectively. This collection incorporates the work of younger scholars along with established names in the field to synthesize the most exciting recent work on the comedia and related forms of early modern Hispanic theatrical production. Contributors include: Ignacio Arellano, Frederick de Armas, Henry Sullivan, Edward Friedman, A. Robert Lauer, Manuel Delgado, Adrienne Martín, Enrique García Santo Tomás, Matthew Stroud, Teresa Scott Soufas, Enrique Fernández, María Mercedes Carrión, Robert Bayliss, Ted Bergman, Cory Reed, Maryrica Lottman, Christina Lee, and Enrique Duarte.