Historical Affects and the Early Modern Theater

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affect
affect theory
affective attachments
affective dynamics in theater research
Antony and Cleopatra
Aquinas
Barren
Blackfriars Theatre
Broken Heart
Caroline Comedy
Category=AFKP
Category=ATD
Category=DSA
Category=DSB
Category=DSG
Complex Performativity
Confer
Court Dwarfs
Cupid
Duck
Early Modern
Early Modern Drama
early modern literature
Early Modern People
Early Modern Theater
Eastward Ho
economic criticism
emotional history
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fair Maid of the West
Follow
gender and performance
Girl Worth Gold
Henry VIII
Historical Affects
Historicist
identity formation
Jean E. Howard
Jean Howard
King John
labor
labour
Lingua
literary studies
London Livery Companies
Magnetic Lady
materialist criticism
Mayoral Pageants
New Historicism
Notoriety
OED
Political Agency
Renaissance drama studies
Shakespear
Shakespeare
Shoemaker's Holiday
Shoemaker’s Holiday
Theater
Theatre
Theatricality
Vp
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138020504
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection of original essays honors the groundbreaking scholarship of Jean E. Howard by exploring cultural and economic constructions of affect in the early modern theater. While historicist and materialist inquiry has dominated early modern theater studies in recent years, the historically specific dimensions of affect and emotion remain underexplored. This volume brings together these lines of inquiry for the first time, exploring the critical turn to affect in literary studies from a historicist perspective to demonstrate how the early modern theater showcased the productive interconnections between historical contingencies and affective attachments. Considering well-known plays such as Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra and Thomas Dekker’s The Shoemaker’s Holiday together with understudied texts such as court entertainments, and examining topics ranging from dramatic celebrity to women’s political agency to the parental emotion of grief, this volume provides a fresh and at times provocative assessment of the "historical affects"—financial, emotional, and socio-political—that transformed Renaissance theater. Instead of treating history and affect as mutually exclusive theoretical or philosophical contexts, the essays in this volume ask readers to consider how drama emplaces the most personal, unspeakable passions in matrices defined in part by financial exchange, by erotic desire, by gender, by the material body, and by theatricality itself. As it encourages this conversation to take place, the collection provides scholars and students alike with a series of new perspectives, not only on the plays, emotions, and histories discussed in its pages, but also on broader shifts and pressures animating literary studies today.

Ronda Arab, Associate Professor of English at Simon Fraser University, is the author of Manly Mechanicals on the Early Modern English Stage (2011), an examination of the gender status of working men in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Michelle M. Dowd is Associate Professor of English at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. She is the author of Women’s Work in Early Modern English Literature and Culture (2009) and The Dynamics of Inheritance on the Shakespearean Stage (forthcoming 2015). Adam Zucker is Associate Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He is the author of The Places of Wit in Early Modern English Comedy and the co-editor of Localizing Caroline Drama: Politics and Economics of the Early Modern English Stage, 1625-1642.