Stages and Playgoers: From Guild Plays to ShakespeareMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2002 - 241 oldal The tradition of direct address has little to do with the frequently touted notion of the "fluidity of the Renaissance stage": the point is not that stage characters can talk to the audience but that they actually do reach out to the playgoers and in so doing import aspects of the audience world to the stage. These exchanges appear frequently in late-medieval drama and continue to be crucial stage strategies for Shakespeare, in whose work they grow and change. By examining a native dramatic tradition not fully explored before, Hill proposes new ways to imagine historical and contemporary performances. Stages and Playgoers will be invaluable for students of cultural studies, medieval and Renaissance studies, theatre history, and stagecraft. |
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4. oldal
... audi- ence's side of the dialogue remains implicit . His words recognize that they are there with him , a solid presence . Cain speaks with his audi- ence , positioning its members openly as the other half of a conversa- tion . Whether ...
... audi- ence's side of the dialogue remains implicit . His words recognize that they are there with him , a solid presence . Cain speaks with his audi- ence , positioning its members openly as the other half of a conversa- tion . Whether ...
5. oldal
... audi- ence only ; I consider it vital that the audience return the stage's gaze , that they be partners in the address . Open address runs through all types of medieval plays : folk drama ; morality plays , both early exam- ples such as ...
... audi- ence only ; I consider it vital that the audience return the stage's gaze , that they be partners in the address . Open address runs through all types of medieval plays : folk drama ; morality plays , both early exam- ples such as ...
7. oldal
... audi- ence involvement . The book's impulse is always towards how var- ious speeches make contact with the playgoers ; it looks not only at what is said , but also at what kind of exchange is set up with audi- ences . In each case , I ...
... audi- ence involvement . The book's impulse is always towards how var- ious speeches make contact with the playgoers ; it looks not only at what is said , but also at what kind of exchange is set up with audi- ences . In each case , I ...
10. oldal
... audi- ence . Michael Bristol has an extraordinary capacity for seeing how Bakhtin's ideas about real physical bodies matter deeply in early modern drama . Anne Higgins shows how vital it is to remember that real people watched - and had ...
... audi- ence . Michael Bristol has an extraordinary capacity for seeing how Bakhtin's ideas about real physical bodies matter deeply in early modern drama . Anne Higgins shows how vital it is to remember that real people watched - and had ...
17. oldal
Sajnáljuk, az oldal tartalma korlátozott hozzáférésű..
Sajnáljuk, az oldal tartalma korlátozott hozzáférésű..
Tartalomjegyzék
Oure Play | 15 |
Nonce Plays | 76 |
I Know You All | 109 |
Open Address in the Romances | 161 |
Notes | 185 |
221 | |
235 | |
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Abraham action actors audi audience audience's Bevington biblical Blackfriars Cain Cambridge University Press characters Chester Christ close comic companies contemporary Corpus Christi costumes court Coventry crowds Cymbeline David Bevington devil early Elizabethan ence England English Drama episode Falstaff figure fool Fulgens and Lucrece galleries goers Gower guild drama guild plays Gurr Hamlet Hattaway heaven Hell Henry Herod Imogen impresario Interludes Jachimo James Burbage John kill king King Lear Lear listeners lives loca London look Lord medieval drama Medieval Theatre modern morality plays N-Town never no-one Noah nonce plays open address openly Pandarus performance platea play's players playgoers Playgoing playing space playworld playwrights Posthumus present Prologue Prospero public playhouses Renaissance Drama Richard romance scaffold servant Shakespeare shepherds soliloquies speaks spectators speech story strategies talk tapster tell theatre theatrical thou tion Towneley Towneley's towns tradition Tudor Twycross Tydeman watching Weimann words York York's þat