Staging the revolution: Drama, reinvention and history, 1647-72

Staging the revolution: Drama, reinvention and history, 1647-72

by Rachel Willie
Staging the revolution: Drama, reinvention and history, 1647-72

Staging the revolution: Drama, reinvention and history, 1647-72

by Rachel Willie

Paperback(Reprint)

$37.95 
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Overview

Staging the revolution offers a reappraisal of the weight and volume of theatrical output during the commonwealth and early Restoration, both in terms of live performances and performances on the paper stage. It argues that the often-cited notion that 1642 marked an end to theatrical production in England until the playhouses were reopened in 1660 is a product of post-Restoration re-writing of the English civil wars and the representations of royalists and parliamentarians that emerged in the 1640s and 1650s. These retellings of recent events in dramatic form mean that drama is central to civil-war discourse. Staging the revolution examines the ways in which drama was used to rewrite the civil war and commonwealth period and demonstrates that, far from marking a clear cultural demarcation from the theatrical output of the early seventeenth century, the Restoration is constantly reflecting back on the previous thirty years.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526139566
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 05/17/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.43(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.54(d)

About the Author

Rachel Willie is Lecturer in English Literature at Bangor University

Table of Contents

Introduction: Of 1647, theatre closure and reinvention
1. The paper stage
2. Fairs, ghosts, tyranny and usurpation: debating the body politic on the paper stage
3. Reinventing the masque: Shirley and Davenant’s protectorate entertainments
4. Heroic drama on the commonwealth and Restoration stage
5. Ideas of panegyric in early Restoration comedy
Epilogue: Of 1688 and reinventing the past
Bibliography
Index

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