113,742 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
"For pure need": Violence, terror and the common people in Henry VI, part 2
This paper looks at representations of the common people in Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part 2 and shows how they were subject to the continual threat of violence and terror in Elziabethan society
Recommended from our members
Postcolonial/queer and the ânewâ South Africa: HIV/AIDS and the emerging queer transnational politics
This article is available open access through the publisherâs website at the link below. Copyright © 2008 Klincksieck.Western AIDS education consultants initially failed to develop effective AIDS prevention
programmes in South Africa. This essay engages the dialogical space
between globalised representations in relation to localised AIDS activism and
strategies of queer resistance
Recommended from our members
The Shakespeare authorship question â A suitable subject for academia
This paper considers whether the Shakespeare Authorship Question is a legitimate subject for study in academia
Recommended from our members
âThy Hunger-Starved Menâ: Shakespeareâs Henry plays and the contemporary lot of the common soldier
Between 1589 and 1599 Shakespeare wrote six Henry plays, two on the reign of Henry IV, one on that of Henry V and three covering that of Henry VI. An important preoccupation, which runs through all of these plays, is the conditions in which common soldiers lived. The years leading up to the appearance of the first of the plays, 1 Henry VI, saw many outbreaks of discontentment on the part of the soldiers in Elizabeth Iâs army. The mass recruitment of troops for Ireland in the 1590s increased such discontentment. This paper examines the contemporary lot of the common soldiers, and shows that Shakespeareâs interest in their situation was one that articulated pervasive, early modern anxieties
Recommended from our members
âAll would be royalâ: The effacement of disunity in Shakespeareâs Henry V
This paper seizes on the unresolved moment of conflict between Henry and the common soldier Williams in Shakespeare's Henry V to demonstrate the ways in which traditional criticism has occluded dissent and co-opted the common soldier on behalf of a perceived empathy towards the king on the part of the author. A look at documented evidence shows that Shakespeare was articulating a common reality in this unresolved moment, one which dsiplays rather than effaces contemporary discontent with the lot of the ordinary soldier
Recommended from our members
Propaganda or a record of events? Richard Mulcasterâs the passage of our most Drad Soveraigne Lady Quene Elyzabeth through the Citie of London Westminster the daye before her coronacion
The pamphlet written by Richard Mulcaster to commemorate the accession of Queen Elizabeth I to the throne, The Passage Of Our Most Drad Soveraigne Lady Quene Elyzabeth Through The Citie Of London To Westminster The Daye Before Her Coronacion, is central to our contemporary understanding of representations of the Queen and of this kind of early modern spectacle. This is demonstrated by the fact that it is a text that is, and has been, constantly used in studies of Elizabethâs reign, her personality and the nature of spectacle itself. This use began with its appearance in Holinshedâs Chronicle, and the pamphlet continues to be referred to in most contemporary critical and historical studies. This paper questions whether, given its widespread use as both a historical and critical document, it is, in fact, reliable. The research presented here shows that it was something else entirely, and should be treated as such. In this sense, this document is seen to participate in what Walter Benjamin has described as a âtriumphal processionâ, whereby it has been transmitted throughout history in a normative fashion, being endlessly reproduced in a manner characterised by focusing upon the dominant figure of Elizabeth, occluding its status as a propagandist text
Recommended from our members
âYou cannot show meâ: Two Tudor Coronation Processions, Shakespeareâs King Henry VIII and the Staging of Anne Boleyn
In this paper, Leahy argues that
Shakespeareâs portrayal of Anne Boleyn in King Henry VIII has traditionally been regarded
as one that does not take account of her ambiguous historical position, and he goes on
to examine this portrayal in the light of her own coronation procession, as well as her
representation in the coronation procession of her daughter, Elizabeth. These
representations of Boleyn are then set against the famous letter written by Sir Henry
Wotton to describe the burning down of the Globe Theatre during a production of
King Henry VIII in 1613. Set within such a context, Leahy argues that the
representation of Anne in the play is not what it has traditionally been made out to be,
but demonstrates the difficulties inherent in staging such a problematic figure
- âŠ