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Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture


About the Series

From Shakespeare to Jonson, Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture looks at both the literature and culture of the early modern period. This series is our home for cutting-edge, upper-level scholarly studies and edited collections. Considering literature alongside theatre, popular culture, race, gender, ecology, space, and other subjects, titles are characterized by dynamic interventions into established subjects and innovative studies on emerging topics.

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Moral Play and Counterpublic

Moral Play and Counterpublic

1st Edition

By Ineke Murakami
February 07, 2011

In this study, Murakami overturns the misconception that popular English morality plays were simple medieval vehicles for disseminating conservative religious doctrine. On the contrary, Murakami finds that moral drama came into its own in the sixteenth century as a method for challenging normative ...

Prophecy and Sibylline Imagery in the Renaissance Shakespeare’s Sibyls

Prophecy and Sibylline Imagery in the Renaissance: Shakespeare’s Sibyls

1st Edition

By Jessica L. Malay
April 07, 2010

This book restores the rich tradition of the Sibyls to the position of prominence they once held in the culture and society of the English Renaissance. The sibyls — figures from classical antiquity — played important roles in literature, scholarship and art of the period, exerting a powerful ...

Staging Early Modern Romance Prose Fiction, Dramatic Romance, and Shakespeare

Staging Early Modern Romance: Prose Fiction, Dramatic Romance, and Shakespeare

1st Edition

Edited By Mary Ellen Lamb, Valerie Wayne
January 26, 2010

This collection recovers the continuities between three forms of romance that have often been separated from one another in critical discourse: early modern prose fiction, the dramatic romances staged in England during the 1570s and 1580s, and Shakespeare’s late plays. Although Pericles, Cymbeline,...

The Popular Culture of Shakespeare, Spenser and Jonson

The Popular Culture of Shakespeare, Spenser and Jonson

1st Edition

By Mary Ellen Lamb
June 15, 2008

Breaking new ground by considering productions of popular culture from above, rather than from below, this book draws on theorists of cultural studies, such as Pierre Bourdieu, Roger Chartier and John Fiske to synthesize work from disparate fields and present new readings of well-known literary ...

Stillness in Motion in the Seventeenth-Century Theatre

Stillness in Motion in the Seventeenth-Century Theatre

1st Edition

By P.A. Skantze
December 30, 2007

Stillness in Motion in the Seventeenth Century Theatre provides a comprehensive examination of this aesthetic theory. The author investigates this aesthetic history as a form of artistic creation, philosophical investigation, a way of representing and manipulating ideas about gender and a way of ...

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