The Circulation of Knowledge in Early Modern English Literature
Auteur : Chiari Sophie
Part 1 Theories and Philosophies of Transmission: Ship of Fools: Foucault and the Shakespeareans. Shakespeare's paradoxes of excellence. Shakespeare and the atomist heritage. Part 2 Initiation Practices: Hilliard and Sidney's 'rule of the eye'. Mercurial apprentices in city comedies. The courtesan and her mother in Middleton's A Mad World, my Masters. Rumour and second-hand knowledge in Much Ado About Nothing. Part 3 Political and Spiritual Issues: Marlowe's political balancing act: religion and translatio imperii in Doctor Faustus (B). Magic, manipulation and misrule in Doctor Faustus and Measure for Measure. Shakespeare and the violation of sanctuary. Limited being: revising Hamlet in The Revenger's Tragedy. Part 4 Transgressions of Gender and Genre: Cephalus and Procris: the transmission of a myth in early modern England. Out-Oviding Ovid in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis. From intertextual to gender transgression in Middleton's The Witch. 'Transversing' and 'transprosing': the case of George Villiers's The Rehearsal (1671). Romeo and Juliet in Brazil: Grupo Galpao's Romeu e Julieta. Afterword: 'Love's transgression'.
Date de parution : 12-2019
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 05-2015
15.6x23.4 cm
Thème de The Circulation of Knowledge in Early Modern English... :
Mots-clés :
doctor; faustus; city; comedies; winters; tale; titus; andronicus; ars; Young Men; amatoria; Richard III; Early Modern English Literature; Roundabout; Violates; Doctor Faustus; Ars Amatoria; Shakespeare’s Venus; City Comedies; De Rerum Natura; Mistress Harebrain; Underweysung Der Messung; King Richard III; Revenger’s Tragedy; Pope Alexander III; Paul III; King George III; James’s Daemonologie; Chevrolet Station Wagon; Minas Gerais; English Faust Book; Book III; Hic Mulier; Cheshire Cat; Midsummer Night’s Dream