Drama, performance and debate : : theatre and public opinion in the early modern period / / edited by Jan Bloemendal, Peter G.F. Eversmann, Elsa Strietman.

Early modern theatre was a visual matter, even though the authors wrote plays which were mainly meant to be read. But whether they wrote their plays to have them performed or not, authors could use comedies, tragi-comedies or tragedies to influence public opinion, to make a statement in a debate, or...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Drama and theatre in early modern Europe, v. 2
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, 2013.
Year of Publication:2013
Language:English
Series:Drama and Theatre in Early Modern Europe 2.
Physical Description:1 online resource (381 p.)
Notes:Selected essays presented at the conference, Drama, Performance and Debate, held in Amsterdam, 29-31 May 2008.
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Other title:Preliminary Material /
Drama, Performance, Debate. Theatre and Public Opinion in the Early Modern Period: An Introduction /
Personal Expression of a Playwright or Public Discourse of a Confraternity? A Performance at the Puy de Notre-Dame in Amiens in 1473 /
Carlo and Marcellino Verardi’s Fernandus servatus and the Poem Supra casum Hispani regis by Petrus Martyr: Drama and Diplomacy in Papal Rome under Alexander VI /
The University out on the Streets: Drama, Debate and Public Space in France (1490–1520) /
Theatre Society in the Early Modern Low Countries: Theatricality, Controversy, and Publicity in Amsterdam in the 1530s /
Theatre in Court: The Heresy Trial Against the Playwright Gnapheus and the Confessionalization of the Lutheran Church /
All About Eve: Genesis and Gender in a Fireworks Display in the Antwerp Entry of Charles V and His Son Philip /
Staged Conversations: Topical Discourse in Sixteenth-Century Dutch Biblical Rhetoricians’ Plays /
The Peasant as a Mouthpiece of Public Opinion in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Dutch Theatre /
Public Debate and Early Modern Drama: Intended or Unintended Topicality in Lummenaeus à Marca’s Carcer Babylonius (1610) /
Contextualizing Nicolas Caussin’s Tragoediae Sacrae (1620): Moral Issues in the Portrayal of Passions /
‘Founded for the Ears and Eyes of the People’: Picturing the Amsterdam Schouwburg from 1637 /
Staging the History of Amsterdam in Vondel’s Gysbreght van Aemstel: A Non-Confessional Dramatic Contribution to the Narrative of the Dutch Revolt /
Mundus Dramaticus: A School Drama and Dramatization – Franciscus van den Enden /
Ballet de la Paix: Staging a Seventeenth-Century Theatre Performance /
Masks and Skulls: Towards an Anatomy of Drama in the Seventeenth Century /
About the Authors /
Index of Names /
Summary:Early modern theatre was a visual matter, even though the authors wrote plays which were mainly meant to be read. But whether they wrote their plays to have them performed or not, authors could use comedies, tragi-comedies or tragedies to influence public opinion, to make a statement in a debate, or to convey explicit or implicit lessons that they carried out or had carried out by linguistic, rhetorical and theatrical means. How explicit they were in expressing their views depended on the characters of the authors or the circumstances in which they wrote. Questions regarding the opinion-forming and opinion-following functions of theatre, the means by which authors and theatre makers expressed their ideas, and the role of theatre and plays in public debate are discussed from various angles. Such questions refer not only to ‘literary’ plays, but also to other forms of theatrical event, such as royal entrances. Contributors include: Imre Bésanger, Hartmut Beyer, Stijn Bussels, Jean-Frédéric Chevalier, Verena Demoed, Arjan van Dixhoorn, Ron Gruijters, Jelle Koopmans, Frans-Willem Korsten, Katell Lavéant, Hubert Meeus, Marco Prandoni, and Helmar Schramm.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:1283854538
9004236996
ISSN:2211-341X ;
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Jan Bloemendal, Peter G.F. Eversmann, Elsa Strietman.