Writing the Reformation: Acts and Monuments and the Jacobean History Play

الغلاف الأمامي
Routledge, 30‏/11‏/2017 - 216 من الصفحات

This title was first published in 2002. This work invests the post-Shakespearean history plays of the Jacobean era - including among others Shakespeare's "Henry VIII" (1613), Dekker's "The Whore of Babylon" (1606), and Heywood's "If You Know Not Me, You Know Nobody" (1604-5)-with new significance by recognizing the role they played in popularizing and re-appropriating Foxe's "Book of Martyrs", one of the most formative and culturally significant Reformation texts. This study presents the historical stage as a site of a continuing Reformation debate over the nature of political authority, the validity of conscience and the challenge to social and gender hierarchies implicit in Protestant doctrine. Relating each play to contemporary political events, the book demonstrates the role of the Jacobean stage in promoting reformation and informing with providential meaning the events unfolding outside the theatre.

 

المحتوى

List of Illustrations
Foxean History
Authority on the Tragicomic
Staging the Record
Staging
Staging a Female
Foxean Revisions on the Jacobean Stage
Bibliography
Index

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