English Drama, 1660-1700Clarendon Press, 1996 - 503 páginas Derek Hughes's magisterial work forms a close critical study of all the surviving plays written and professionally premiered in England between 1660 and 1700. This extremely readable volume analyses many individual texts, often in detail and for the first time, and also places them within the whole range of contemporary theatrical output, with its diversity of outlook and constant shifts in fashion and subject. Thus The Country-Wife (1675) and The Man of Mode (1676) are treated not as typical 'Restoration Comedies' but as almost unique plays, profoundly different even from each other, which would have been unimaginable even two years earlier or later than the time of their appearance. Hughes also presents innovative work on the political, intellectual, and social background of the corpus, with extensive discussion of its treatment of women and the contribution of women dramatists. |
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Página 35
... contrast with the usurper in Orrery's The Generall , Howard's is a crudely drawn monster , but both men attempt to rape the heroine : in contrast to the younger generation of dramat- ists , both playwrights see unrestrained sexual ...
... contrast with the usurper in Orrery's The Generall , Howard's is a crudely drawn monster , but both men attempt to rape the heroine : in contrast to the younger generation of dramat- ists , both playwrights see unrestrained sexual ...
Página 218
... contrast - setting the ways of the hand against the desires of the heart . Here , the contrast is resolved : Willmore and La Nuche link hands , and Ariadne agrees ' With all my Heart ' to a marriage with Beaumond conditional upon ...
... contrast - setting the ways of the hand against the desires of the heart . Here , the contrast is resolved : Willmore and La Nuche link hands , and Ariadne agrees ' With all my Heart ' to a marriage with Beaumond conditional upon ...
Página 383
... contrast , the most triumphant overwriting of the self occurs when Tattle and Mrs Frail are tricked into assuming the guise of friar and nun and marrying each other , Tattle believing that his bride is Angelica and Mrs Frail that her ...
... contrast , the most triumphant overwriting of the self occurs when Tattle and Mrs Frail are tricked into assuming the guise of friar and nun and marrying each other , Tattle believing that his bride is Angelica and Mrs Frail that her ...
Contenido
Influences | 1 |
Astraea Redux? Drama 16601668 | 30 |
Tragedy 16681676 | 78 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
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