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Early Modern Drama in Performance

Essays in Honor of Lois Potter
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Early Modern Drama in Performance is a collection of essays in honor of Lois Potter, the distinguished author of five monographs, including most recently The Life of William Shakespeare (2012), and numerous articles, edited collections, and editions. This collection's emphasis on Shakespearean and early modern drama reflects the area for which Potter is most widely known, as a performance critic, editor, and literary scholar. The essays by a diverse group of scholars who have been influenced by Potter address recurring themes in her work: Shakespeare and non-Shakespearean early modern drama, performance history and theatre practice, theatrical performance across cultures, play reviewing, and playreading. What unifies them most, though, is that they carry on the spirit of Potter's work: her ability to meet a text, a performance, or a historical period on its own terms, to give scrupulous attention to specific details and elegantly show how these details generate larger meaning, and to recover and preserve the fleeting and the ephemeral.
Introduction by Darlene Farabee, Mark Netzloff, and Bradley D. Ryner Chapter 1: Dramatic Verse and Early Modern Playgoers in Marlowe's Time by Roslyn L. Knutson Chapter 2: The Usurer's Theatrical Body: Refiguring Profit in The Jew of Malta and The Blind Beggar of Alexandria by Bradley D. Ryner Chapter 3: Theater of Anatomy: The Tragedy of Hoffman by Peter Hyland Chapter 4: 'Know you this ring?': Metonymic Functions of a Prop by Ann Thompson and John O. Thompson Chapter 5: Editing and Staging The Revenger's Tragedy: Three Problems by Alan C. Dessen Chapter 6: The `most unsavoury similes' and Henry IV, Part One by Darlene Farabee Chapter 7: Shakespeare's Cognitive Vision by Arthur Kinney Chapter 8: Shakespeare's Conception of Tragedy: The Middle Tragedies by Jay L. Halio Chapter 9: Shakespeare or not Shakespeare?: The propogation of the text in Europe through J. F. Ducis's `Imitations' by Michele Willems Chapter 10:Un/natural Perspective: Viola on the late nineteenth-century stage by Virginia Mason Vaughan Chapter 11: Reading, Recitation, and Entertainments: The Dunedin Shakespeare Club, 1877-1956 by Evelyn Tribble Chapter 12: The power of Shakespeare's word in twentieth-century Prague by Zdenek Stribrny Chapter 13: Showtime: Temporality and the Video Archive of Julius Caesar at the RSC by Andrew Hartley
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