Teaching British Women Playwrights of the Restoration and Eighteenth Century

MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATIONISBN: 9781603290838

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Edited by Bonnie Nelson, Catherine Burroughs
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MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
226 x 152 mm
Weight:
670 g
Pages:
478

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Description

Bonnie Nelson is associate professor of English at Kansas State University. She is the winner of two Excellence in Teaching Awards from the College of Arts and Sciences, as well as the department's SAGE award for graduate teaching. She has published in such periodicals as Theatre Survey, Keats-Shelley Journal, and Women's Writing. Catherine Burroughs is Ruth and Albert Koch Professor of Humanities at Wells College and visiting lecturer in English at Cornell University. Her publications include Reading the Social Body; Closet Stages: Joanna Baillie and the Theater Theory of British Romantic Women Writers; and Women in British Romantic Theatre: Drama, Performance, and Society, 1790-1840.

"Bonnie Nelson and Catherine Burroughs, deserve kudos for their efforts. In drawing on scholars from a number of different countries and disciplines, Nelson and Burroughs offer a multiplicity of views and ideas on pedagogical aspects of female playwrights in this historical period. . . . Burroughs' essay on closet drama and the illegitimate theater is fascinating and made me rethink a topic I typically tend to forget. . . . [Anderson's and Nachimi's essays] are, frankly, amazing. Emily Hodgson Anderson's essay, which explores comparative contexts as a means to challenge assumptions about gender difference, is also particularly noteworthy. . . . Finally, two other essays deserve particular recognition: Marie E. MacAllister's lucid essay on performative learning furnishes outstanding ideas for pedagogical opportunities through "dramatic readings," and Jean I. Marsden's well-written challenge to create a course on women dramatists in their theatrical, literary, and social contexts ends with an ambitious syllabus that can be honed, redeveloped, or expanded depending on the students' level." --Judy A. Hayden, ABO: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts, 1640-1830

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