Marlowe and the Popular Tradition: Innovation in the English Drama Before 1595Rejecting the traditional stereotypes of Marlowe (spy, troublemaker, homosexual, atheist, university wit) this study considers him as a popular dramatist who inherited an audience with certain expectations and shared experiences. It explores his engagement with the traditions of the popular stage in the 1580s and early 1590s and offers a new approach to his major plays in terms of staging and audience response. This account of English drama in these important but largely neglected years challenges the narratives of change in late 16th century. It Discusses Marlowe's plays in relation to some 30 other playtexts, earlier and contemporary, including Shakespeare's early plays. Marlowe emerges not so much as a precursor of Shakespeare but as an innovator and catalyst of change, the playwright who exploited and transformed the traditional materials of popular drama. |
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Christopher Marlowe and English Renaissance Culture . Ed . Darryll Grantley
and Peter Roberts . Aldershot , Hants : Scolar , 1996 . Graves , R. B. ' Elizabethan
Lighting Effects and the Convention of Indoor and Outdoor Theatrical Illumination
' ...
Christopher Marlowe and English Renaissance Culture . Ed . Darryll Grantley
and Peter Roberts . Aldershot , Hants : Scolar , 1996 . Graves , R. B. ' Elizabethan
Lighting Effects and the Convention of Indoor and Outdoor Theatrical Illumination
' ...
Page 227
Kernodle , George R. From Art to Theatre : Form and Convention in the
Renaissance . Chicago : University of Chicago Press , 1944 . Kimbrough , Robert
. Christopher Marlowe ' . The Predecessors of Shakespeare : A Survey and
Bibliography ...
Kernodle , George R. From Art to Theatre : Form and Convention in the
Renaissance . Chicago : University of Chicago Press , 1944 . Kimbrough , Robert
. Christopher Marlowe ' . The Predecessors of Shakespeare : A Survey and
Bibliography ...
Page 228
English Literary Renaissance 5 ( 1975 ) : 171-97 . -Hammer or Anvil :
Psychological Patterns in Christopher Marlowe's Plays . New Brunswick , NJ :
Rutgers University Press , 1980 . Leech , Clifford . Christopher Marlowe : Poet for
the Stage .
English Literary Renaissance 5 ( 1975 ) : 171-97 . -Hammer or Anvil :
Psychological Patterns in Christopher Marlowe's Plays . New Brunswick , NJ :
Rutgers University Press , 1980 . Leech , Clifford . Christopher Marlowe : Poet for
the Stage .
Page 229
Renaissance Studies 4.2 ( 1990 ) : 155-200 . Marcus , Leah S. ' Textual
Indeterminacy and Ideological Difference : The Case of Doctor Faustus ' .
Renaissance Drama ns 29 ( 1989 ) : 1-29 . ... Emblems in English Renaissance
Drama ' .
Renaissance Studies 4.2 ( 1990 ) : 155-200 . Marcus , Leah S. ' Textual
Indeterminacy and Ideological Difference : The Case of Doctor Faustus ' .
Renaissance Drama ns 29 ( 1989 ) : 1-29 . ... Emblems in English Renaissance
Drama ' .
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Contents
Approaches and contexts | 14 |
Viewing the sign | 36 |
Lessons of history | 67 |
Framing the action | 93 |
Looking at Angels | 124 |
Managing the space | 158 |
Till experience change | 182 |
Other editions - View all
Marlowe and the Popular Tradition: Innovation in the English Drama before 1595 Ruth Lunney No preview available - 2011 |
Common terms and phrases
action Angels appears attention audience aware Barabas becomes called ceremony challenge character complex Conscience contemporary context continue conventional critical cultural death debatable defined developed direct discussion drama dramatic earlier early Edward effect elements Elizabethan emblem emblematic emotional English especially example exemplary expectations exploit Faustus figures framing hand Henry important individual instances interpretation kind King language late later less London Looking Lords Marlowe Marlowe's plays matter means moments morality narrative nature notes observed offers particular pattern performance perhaps perspectives play's players playhouse plays playworld popular position possible practice presented Prologue provides reference reflect relationship Renaissance response rhetoric Richard scene seen sense Shakespeare shift significant simply sixteenth-century social space spectators speech stage structures studies suggests Tamburlaine theatre theatrical experience Three Ladies tion traditional Tragedy values Vice visual signs voices