Festive Enterprise: The Business of Drama in Medieval and Renaissance England

Festive Enterprise

The Business of Drama in Medieval and Renaissance England
 
Edition number: 1
Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Print PDF
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9780268109097
ISBN10:0268109095
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:260 pages
Size:229x152x14 mm
Weight:370 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 6 Illustrations, black & white
295
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Long description:

Festive Enterprise reveals marketplace pressures at the heart of dramatic form in medieval and Renaissance drama.


In Festive Enterprise, Jill P. Ingram merges the history of economic thought with studies of theatricality and spectatorship to examine how English Renaissance plays employed forms and practices from medieval and traditional entertainments to signal the expectation of giving from their audiences. Resisting the conventional divide between medieval and Renaissance, Festive Enterprise takes a trans-Reformation view of dramaturgical strategies, which reflected the need to generate both income and audience assent. By analyzing a wide range of genres (such as civic ceremonial, mummings, interludes, scripted plays, and university drama) and a diverse range of venues (including great halls, city streets, the Inns of Court, and public playhouses), Ingram demonstrates how early moderns borrowed medieval money-gatherers? techniques to signal communal obligations and rewards for charitable support of theatrical endeavors. Ingram shows that economics and drama cannot be considered as separate enterprises in the medieval and Renaissance periods. Rather, marketplace pressures were at the heart of dramatic form in medieval and Renaissance drama alike.


Festive Enterprise is an original study that traces how economic forces drove creativity in drama from medieval civic processions and guild cycle plays to the early Renaissance. It will appeal to scholars of medieval and early modern drama, theater historians, religious historians, scholars of Renaissance drama, and students in English literature, drama, and theater.



?The virtue of Festive Enterprise is to situate famous plays from the era in a detailed historical context that helps to illuminate the achievement of Shakespeare and some of his better-known contemporaries. It?s a solid and significant contribution to the scholarship of medieval and Renaissance drama in England.? ?Paul A. Cantor, author of Shakespeare?s Roman Trilogy

Table of Contents:

Introduction


1. The Festive Gatherer and the Empathetic Thief: The Genealogy of a Character


2. Forms of Investment: Mummings, Prologues and Epilogues


3. Reconciliation in The Winter?s Tale: Devotion and Commerce from Guilds to Church Ales


4. The Mobile Entertainer: John Taylor?s Penniless Pilgrimage


5. Coding Complaint in Gesta Grayorum and The Christmas Prince


6. ?A Jest?s Prosperity?: The Market, Marprelate, and Love?s Labour?s Lost


Conclusion