Women on Stage in Stuart DramaCambridge University Press, 2005 - 294 من الصفحات Women on Stage in Stuart Drama provides a 'prehistory' of the actress, filling an important gap in established accounts of how women came to perform in the Restoration theatre. Sophie Tomlinson uncovers and analyzes a revolution in theatrical discourse in response to the cultural innovations of two Stuart queens consort, Anna of Denmark and the French Henrietta Maria. Their appearances on stage in masques and pastoral drama engendered a new poetics of female performance, which registered acting as a powerful means of self-determination for women. The pressure of cultural change is inscribed in a plethora of dramatic texts that explore the imaginative possibilities inspired by female acting. These include plays by the key royalist women writers Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, and Katherine Philips. The material explored by Tomlinson illustrates a fresh vision of theatrical femininity and encompasses an unusually sympathetic interest in questions of female liberty and selfhood. |
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النتائج 1-5 من 85
الصفحة i
Sophie Tomlinson. WOMEN ON STAGE IN STUART DRAMA Women on Stage in Stuart Drama provides a ' prehistory ' of the actress , filling an important gap in established accounts of how women came to perform in the Restoration theatre . Sophie ...
Sophie Tomlinson. WOMEN ON STAGE IN STUART DRAMA Women on Stage in Stuart Drama provides a ' prehistory ' of the actress , filling an important gap in established accounts of how women came to perform in the Restoration theatre . Sophie ...
الصفحة xi
... Women , Texts and Histories 1575-1760 ( London : Routledge , 1992 ) , pp . 134–63 . The same chapter reworks a paragraph which appeared in my essay on ' Drama ' in Anita Pacheco ( ed . ) , A Companion to Early Modern Women's Writing ...
... Women , Texts and Histories 1575-1760 ( London : Routledge , 1992 ) , pp . 134–63 . The same chapter reworks a paragraph which appeared in my essay on ' Drama ' in Anita Pacheco ( ed . ) , A Companion to Early Modern Women's Writing ...
الصفحة 1
... women began representing themselves on the public stage . How did this cultural trans- formation come about ? And what was the impact on the audience , and on English drama , when ' the woman's part ' was indeed performed by a woman ...
... women began representing themselves on the public stage . How did this cultural trans- formation come about ? And what was the impact on the audience , and on English drama , when ' the woman's part ' was indeed performed by a woman ...
الصفحة 3
... women ' . " Hitherto critics have focused on the sociopolitical function of women's masque performances . For the purposes of this book , the importance of the Stuart masque lies in the newly significant and signifying role accorded to ...
... women ' . " Hitherto critics have focused on the sociopolitical function of women's masque performances . For the purposes of this book , the importance of the Stuart masque lies in the newly significant and signifying role accorded to ...
الصفحة 5
... women's self - fashioning and their ambivalent status as subjects . " The image of the actress converges with the idea of the female subject to the extent that a vocal woman transgressed the patriarchal ideology which worked to keep women ...
... women's self - fashioning and their ambivalent status as subjects . " The image of the actress converges with the idea of the female subject to the extent that a vocal woman transgressed the patriarchal ideology which worked to keep women ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action actors actress Anna of Denmark audience beauty Bellessa Ben Jonson Bianca Bonavent Broken Heart Calantha Cambridge University Press Carol Cartwright chastity Circe Circe's Cleopatra Coleorton comedy Comus court masque culture Cupid Cupid's Banishment CWKP dance Daniel's death discourse dramatists Duchess Duchess of Malfi Echo Elizabeth English Eumela Fairfield female performance feminine Ford's Gender Henrietta Maria heroic husband Hyde Park Inigo Jones Ithocles Jacobean James Shirley John Ford Jonson Katherine Philips Lady Frances Lady-Errant Lady's line in parentheses literary London Love's Sacrifice madness male Margaret Cavendish marriage masculine masquers McManus Messallina Milton Mistress Montagu's Moramante Newcastle nymphs Orgel Orgilus Oxford Paradise pastoral Penthea's Philips's play play's Poems political Pompey Queen Renaissance Renaissance Drama representation represented Revels role Rosaura's royal scene sexual Shakespeare's Shepherds shift Shirley Shirley's song speech stage Stephen Orgel Stuart Tempe Restored theatre theatrical Tragedy tragicomedy virtue William woman women writing
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 3 - I have heard of your paintings too, well enough ; God hath given you one face, and you make yourselves another...
الصفحة 6 - See here the reason of that which I touched before, — that women have no voice in Parliament. They make no laws, they consent to none, they abrogate none. All of them are understood either married or to be married, and their desires are to their husbands. I know no remedy, that some women can shift it well enough.
الصفحة 13 - Cage, a comedy, which wanteth, I must confess, much of that ornament, which the stage and action lent it, for it comprehending also another play or interlude, personated by ladies, * I must refer to your imagination, the music, the songs, the dancing, and other varieties, which I know would have pleas'd you infinitely in the presentment.
مراجع لهذا الكتاب
Drama at the Courts of Queen Henrietta Maria <span dir=ltr>Karen Britland</span> معاينة محدودة - 2006 |