Unwritten Poetry: Song, Performance, and Media in Early Modern England

Unwritten Poetry: Song, Performance, and Media in Early Modern England

by Scott A. Trudell
Unwritten Poetry: Song, Performance, and Media in Early Modern England

Unwritten Poetry: Song, Performance, and Media in Early Modern England

by Scott A. Trudell

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Overview

Vocal music was at the heart of English Renaissance poetry and drama. Virtuosic actor-singers redefined the theatrical culture of William Shakespeare and his peers. Composers including William Byrd and Henry Lawes shaped the transmission of Renaissance lyric verse. Poets from Philip Sidney to John Milton were fascinated by the disorienting influx of musical performance into their works. Musical performance was a driving force behind the period's theatrical and poetic movements, yet its importance to literary history has long been ignored or effaced. This book reveals the impact of vocalists and composers upon the poetic culture of early modern England by studying the media through which--and by whom--its songs were made. In a literary field that was never confined to writing, media were not limited to material texts. Scott Trudell argues that the media of Renaissance poetry can be conceived as any node of transmission from singer's larynx to actor's body. Through his study of song, Trudell outlines a new approach to Renaissance poetry and drama that is grounded not simply in performance history or book history but in a more synthetic media history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780192571700
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Publication date: 03/07/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Scott A. Trudell is Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Maryland, College Park. His research focuses on early modern poetry, drama, music, and pageantry, as well as media studies, sound studies, performance studies, and gender studies. His publications have appeared in journals including PMLA, Renaissance Studies, Shakespeare Quarterly, and Studies in Philology, and he is a co-principal investigator of Early Modern Songscapes, an interdisciplinary digital humanities project on the musical performance of English Renaissance poetry.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Philip Sidney and Musical Poesis
i. Redefining Poetry: Mediation in Sidney's Defence
ii. "Theatre Public": Performance and Communio in Sidney's Arcadia
iii. Musical Experimentation: William Byrd, Astrophil and Stella, and Sidneian Song iv. Echoes of Sidney: The Lute Song Movement and Bibliographic Performance
2. Children's Mediated Bodies
i. Musical Abuse: The Case of Richard Edwards ii. Naughty Exercise: John Marston's Unsettling Choristers iii. Jonson's Cracks: Attenuated Bodies in Cynthia's Revels and Epicene
3. Shakespeare's Musical Thresholds
i. Twelfth Night and Musical Paratext ii. Performing Objects in A Midsummer Night's Dream
iii. 'More than Matter': Ophelia's Orphic Song
4. John Milton and Musical Abjection
i. Song and Evanescence in A Maske Presented at Ludlow Castle
ii. Milton and the Cavaliers: Henry Lawes, Alice Egerton, and Interregnum Song iii. 'Hideous Noise': Performance Anxiety in Samson Agonistes and Paradise Lost
Coda: Spenser and the Un-Invention of Literature
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