The English Renaissance Stage
Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial Arts 1580-1630
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 25 November 2010
- ISBN 9780199595457
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages344 pages
- Size 234x155x19 mm
- Weight 530 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 27 halftones 0
Categories
Short description:
This book demonstrates how the drama of Shakespeare, Dekker, Jonson, and others cannot be adequately explained without reference to early scientific thought. It recovers the historical moment when playwrights collaborated with carpenters, surveyors, and engineers, and poets borrowed ideas about literary form from the field of practical mathematics.
MoreLong description:
Drawing on entirely new evidence, The English Renaissance Stage: Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial Arts 1580-1630 examines the history of English dramatic form and its relationship to the mathematics, technology, and early scientific thought during the Renaissance period. The book demonstrates how practical modes of thinking that were typical of the sixteenth century resulted in new genres of plays and a new vocabulary for problems of poetic representation. In the epistemological moment the book recovers, we find new ideas about form and language that would become central to Renaissance literary discourse; in this same moment, too, we find new ways of thinking about the relationship between theory and practice that are typical of modernity, new attitudes towards spatial representation, and a new interest in both poetics and mathematics as distinctive ways of producing knowledge about the world. By emphasizing the importance of theatrical performance, the book engages with continuing debates over the cultural function of the early modern stage and with scholarship on the status of modern authorship. When we consider playwrights in relation to the theatre rather than the printed book, they appear less as 'authors' than as figures whose social position and epistemological presuppositions were very similar to the craftsmen, surveyors, and engineers who began to flourish during the sixteenth century and whose mathematical knowledge made them increasingly sought after by men of wealth and power.
Review from previous edition This is interdisciplinary work of impressive ambition and range, by someone who is arguably one of the most brilliant young scholars in the world working on Renaissance literature
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Part 1: Diagram, Image, Icon
Practical Knowledge and the Poetics of Geometry
Sir Philip Sidney and the Practical Imagination
Noun, Foot, and Measured Line
Part 2: Stage, Wall, Scene, Plot
Theatre as a Spatial Art
The Topographic Stage
Dramatic Form and the Projective Intelligence
Ben Jonson's Scenography