Early Modern Drama and the Eastern Europen Elsewhere
Representation of Liminal Locality in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Published:1st Apr '09
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This study integrates Renaissance texts of classical and early modern geography, cartography, and travel writing with postmodern theory to challenge the long-standing tradition of Eastern European space as a distant land of elsewhere and to demonstrate how contemporary modes of geographic thinking influenced aspects of English dramatic form. By examining the ways in which habits of thought derived from these texts informed Renaissance ideas about Eastern European space, this book shows how the threshold dividing the symbolic and the real is traversed and imagined as traversable. The study gives useful background on how Eastern European locations would have signified as marginal to early modern English audiences. Re-reading early modern texts ranging from geographic and travel accounts to the early modern drama of Shakespeare and his contemporaries, this study argues for a questioning and perspectival dimension of early modern subjectivity as fashioned by these texts, which emerges as enabling and compelling.
In her new book, Early Modern Drama and the Eastern European Elsewhere, she shifts her focus from Romanian reception of English plays to constructions of Eastern Europe among Shakespeare and his contemporaries. We learn from this study that the region appeared with some frequency in early modern dramatic texts, where it marked the periphery of safe civilization through its association with foreign peoples, barbaric practices, and dangerous seas. * Shakespeare Studies *
ISBN: 9781611474039
Dimensions: 244mm x 168mm x 19mm
Weight: 490g
306 pages