Ancient Scripts and Modern Experience on the English Stage, 1500-1700 :Ancient Scripts and Modern Experience on the English Stage, 1500-1700 ( Princeton Legacy Library )

Publication subTitle :Ancient Scripts and Modern Experience on the English Stage, 1500-1700

Publication series :Princeton Legacy Library

Author: Smith Bruce R.;;;  

Publisher: Princeton University Press‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9781400859399

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780691067391

Subject: I1 World Literature;I106.2 Poetry;J8 Dramatic

Keyword: 世界文学,戏剧艺术

Language: ENG

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Description

Unlike the contrast between the sacred and the taboo, the opposition of "comic" and "tragic" is not a way of categorizing experience that we find in cultures all over the world or even at different periods in Western civilization. Though medieval writers and readers distinguished stories with happy endings from stories with unhappy endings, it was not until the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries--fifteen hundred years after Sophocles, Euripides, Plautus, and Terence had last been performed in the theaters of the Roman Empire--that tragedy and comedy regained their ancient importance as ways of giving dramatic coherence to human events. Ancient Scripts and Modern Experience on the English Stage charts that rediscovery, not in the pages of scholars' books, but on the stages of England's schools, colleges, inns of court, and royal court, and finally in the public theaters of sixteenth-and seventeenth-century London.

In bringing to imaginative life the scripts, eyewitness accounts, and financial records of these productions, Bruce Smith turns to the structuralist models that anthropologists have used to explain how human beings as social creatures organize and systematize experience. He sets in place the critical, physical, and social structures in which sixteenth-and seventeenth-century Englishmen watched productions of classical comedy and classical tragedy. Seen in these three contexts, these productions play out a conflict between classical and medieval ways of und

Chapter

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Prologue

I. Critical Contexts

II. Spatial Contexts

III. Social Contexts

IV. Comedy

V. Tragedy

Epilogue

Index

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