11,169 research outputs found
Toward a Multicultural Mid-Tudor England
Through close-readings of Mary Tudor's royal entry, the anonymous interlude Wealth and Health, and John Christopherson's Exhortation alongside anecdotes of popular resistance to Mary Tudor's antiimmigrant proclamations, this article shows that rather than a strong identification with the monarch or some sense of Englishness, Londoners more closely identified with their multicultural metropolitan community for religious and economic reasons
Outlandish Love: Marriage and Immigration in City Comedies
This article questions the orthodox reading of early English city comedies that such plays exhibit intense national or proto-national fervor, especially articulated in terms of anti-alien sentiment. A close examination of The Dutch Courtesan and Englishmen for My Money shows that English playgoers were keen to see their cosmopolitan city staged. Moreover, these plays suggest that when it came to European immigrants to England, status and wealth were far more important to the English than considerations of birthplace and ethnicity
The Petition on the Early English Stage
This article is about petitioning scenes on the early modern English stage
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