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Making Make-Believe Real

Politics as Theater in Shakespeare's Time

Garry Wills author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Yale University Press

Published:30th Jun '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Making Make-Believe Real cover

A penetrating study of the images, symbols, pageants, and creative performances ambitious Elizabethans used to secure political power

Shakespeare’s plays abound with kings and leaders who crave a public stage and seize every opportunity to make their lives a performance: Antony, Cleopatra, Richard III, Othello, and many others. Such self-dramatizing characters appear in the work of other playwrights of the era as well, Marlowe’s Edward II and Tamburlaine among them. But Elizabethan playwrights were not alone in realizing that a sense of theater was essential to the exercise of power. Real rulers knew it, too, and none better than Queen Elizabeth. In this fascinating study of political stagecraft in the Elizabethan era, Garry Wills explores a period of vast cultural and political change during which the power of make-believe to make power real was not just a theory but an essential truth.
 
Wills examines English culture as Catholic Christianity’s rituals were being overturned and a Protestant queen took the throne. New iconographies of power were necessary for the new Renaissance liturgy to displace the medieval church-state. The author illuminates the extensive imaginative constructions that went into Elizabeth’s reign and the explosion of great Tudor and Stuart drama that provided the imaginative power to support her long and successful rule.

"As entertainingly readable as it is broadly informative.”—John Simon, New York Times Book Review on Rome and Rhetoric -- John Simon * New York Times Book Review *

ISBN: 9780300212716

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 535g

424 pages