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(Re)defining gender in early modern English drama: Power, sexualities and ideologies in text and performance New edition [Minkštas viršelis]

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Taking as its common thread the overtly theatrical nature of early modern society and its cultural and political manifestations this book studies dramatic texts, dedications, autobiographies, adaptations and performative practices, to prove that the boundaries between on and off stage performances of gender are blurred. Thus, the limits that separate theatre and life are highly permeable and the relations between both are bidirectional: the performativity of gender and identity is an idea that the theatre takes from and transfers to society. This concept is applied to a wide timeframe creating a dialogue between different historical times and cultural backgrounds. Furthermore, the authors explore sexualities as written and performed by both men and women, offering a wider scope to determine whether and to what extent normative gender roles are being questioned, contested or reinforced.



This book studies dramatic texts, dedications, autobiographies, adaptations and performative practices, to prove that the boundaries between on and off stage performances of gender are blurred. The limits that separate theatre and life are highly permeable and the relations between both are bidirectional: the performativity of gender and identity.

I Introduction
(Re)Defining Gender In Early Modern British Drama
11(12)
Laura Martinez-Garcia
II Negotiating Gender Off Stage: Patronesses, Celebrities And Playwrights
Charles IPs Mistresses and Patronesses of Drama: The Dedications Addressed to Cleveland, Gwyn, and Portsmouth
23(26)
Nora Rodriguez-Loro
"The female humourist, a kickshaw mess". The Identities of the `Man-Woman' Performer in Early Modern England
49(24)
Aniko Oroszlan
"How emotions were used as strategies of power and shaped language in the Plays and Memoirs of Margaret Cavendish"
73(22)
Maria Jose Alvarez Faedo
III Women Acting: Performance, Identity And Power
"Our worser thoughts Heavens mend!" because Shakespeare wouldn't: a View on the Construction of Femininity in Antony and Cleopatra
95(22)
Manuel Vicente Calvo
Romantic Readers on Stage: How Don Quixote Became a Woman and Attempted to change the world
117(22)
Miriam Borham Puyal
Arche-Violence And Rape In Thomas Middleton's Women Beware Women
139(24)
Sara Vazifehshenas
Nahid Shahbazi Moghadam
IV Men On Stage: Buttressing And Questioning Notions Of Manhood
"Gallops to the tune of `Light o' love'": Hobby-horses, stigmatised women and male riders in The Two Noble Kinsmen
163(26)
Natalia Pikli
The Double Marriage: A gendered approach to politics and power
189(18)
Raquel Serrano Gonzalez
V Women Rewriting Men: Aphra Behn on Masculinity
"I have had enough of variety": Reclaiming the Rake in The Debauchee
207(18)
Jorge Figueroa Dorrego
"Onely Cheated, Robb'd, Abus'd, And Undone, Sir": Wine and The Whiggish Merchant In Behn's the Revenge: Or, A Match In Newgate (1680)
225(18)
Angeles Tome Rosales
VI Index
Index
243(8)
VII On the Contributors
On The Contributors
251
Laura Martķnez-Garcķa is a lecturer at the University of Oviedo (Spain). Her research focuses on the constructions of gender in 17thcentury English drama written by female playwrights as well as their views on Anglo-Iberian relations.









Marķa José Įlvarez Faedo is a senior lecturer at the University of Oviedo. Her main areas of research are English drama, emotions and affections in Renaissance, Restoration, 18th- and 19th-century literature, Arthurian literature and the influence of Don Quixote in English literature.