Typographies of Performance in Early Modern England
«Typographies of Performance in Early Modern England is a model of excellent scholarship: predicated on impressive research, it outlines important arguments in clear and graceful writing.»
Laura Estill, Seventeenth-Century News
Typographies of Performance in Early Modern England is the first book-length study of early modern English playbook typography. It tells a new history of drama from the period by considering the page designs of plays by Shakespeare and others printed between the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth century. Les mer
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agents of the book trade to make the effects of theatricality-from the most basic (textually articulating a change in speaker) to the more complex (registering the kinesis of bodies on stage)-intelligible on the page.
The coalescence of these experiments into a uniquely dramatic typography that was constantly responsive to performance effects made it possible for 'plays' to be marketed, collected, and read in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as a print genre distinct from all other genres of imaginative writing. It has been said, 'If a play is a book, it is not a play.' Typographies of Performance in Early Modern England shows that 'play' and 'book' were, in fact, mutually constitutive: it
was the very bookishness of plays printed in early modern England that allowed them to be recognized by their earliest readers as plays in the first place.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Oxford University Press
- Innbinding
- Innbundet
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9780198848790
- Utgivelsesår
- 2020
- Format
- 24 x 16 cm
Anmeldelser
«Typographies of Performance in Early Modern England is a model of excellent scholarship: predicated on impressive research, it outlines important arguments in clear and graceful writing.»
Laura Estill, Seventeenth-Century News
«This capacious, thoughtful work allows readers to conceive of the possibilities of new scholarship in the history of early modern English playbooks. Because Bourne regards the members of the early English book trade with grace, she releases them from the burden of habitual faultiness. She initiates a truly fantastic way of approaching playbooks that prioritizes 'readerly access to these forms of theatricality rather than foreclosing the chance to experience their effects'.»
Brandi K. Adams, Early Theatre