Unto the Breach
Martial Formations, Historical Trauma, and the Early Modern Stage
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 13 November 2008
- ISBN 9780199212057
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages240 pages
- Size 240x161x18 mm
- Weight 555 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 12 halftones 0
Categories
Short description:
This original and historically rigorous study of war in Elizabethan drama and culture examines the era's emergent military science as played out in its theatres, where large audiences came to see war dramas throughout the late sixteenth century. Cahill also shows how the theatre registered the trauma produced by the new modes of warfare.
MoreLong description:
The Elizabethan theatrical repertory was enthralled with the era's martial discourses and beset by its blinding visions. In her richly historicized account of the theater's engagement with 'modern' warfare, Patricia Cahill juxtaposes the new military technologies and new modes of martial abstraction with the performance of war-suffused dramas by Shakespeare, Marlowe, and their contemporaries. Equally important, she shows that even as early-modern playwrights engaged cutting-edge military practices, they routinely trafficked in phenomena resistant to the new rationalities, conjuring up a domain of eerie sounds, uncanny figures, and haunted temporalities.
By going beyond the usual protocols of historicist criticism and emphasizing the complex dynamics of theatrical modes of address, this wide-ranging study investigates the representation of early-modern war trauma and recovers for us a compelling sense of the intimate relationship between affect and intellect on the Renaissance stage. Intervening in ongoing conversations about the drama's role in shaping the cultural imaginary, Unto the Breach shows that, in an era of escalating militarization, England's first commercial theaters offered their audiences something of incalculable value - namely, a space for the performance and 'working through' of what might otherwise remain psychically unbearable in war's violence.
engagingly written
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Martial Formations: Marlowe's Theater of Abstraction in Tamburlaine, Parts 1 and 2
Spare Men and Great Ones: Musters, Norms, and the Average Man in Shakespeare's 1 and 2 Henry IV
Biopower in the English Pale: Generation and Genocide in King Edward III
Atrocity in Arcadia: Wounds, Women, and the Face of Trauma in The Trial of Chivalry
Wound-Man Walking: Visceral History andTraumatized Bodies in Alarum for London
Epilogue: Dreadful Marches: Traumatic Time and Space in Shakespeare's Richard III