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The Actor as Playwright in Early Modern Drama

 

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Word Power Books

The Actor as Playwright in Early Modern Drama


by Nora Johnson (Author)

 

Hardback

ISBN: 9780521824163

 

Availability:
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Our Price: £55.10

RRP £58.00 , Save £2.90

 

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  • Description
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  • Contents

Uncovers important links between acting and authorship in early modern England.


Nora Johnson's study of actors who wrote plays in early modern England uncovers important links between performance and authorship. The book traces the careers of Robert Armin, Nathan Field, Anthony Munday and Thomas Heywood, actors who were powerfully interested in marketing themselves as authors and celebrities; but Johnson contends that authorship as they constructed it had little to do with modern ideas of control and ownership. Finally, the book repositions Shakespeare in relation to actors, considering Shakespeare's famous silence about his own work as one strategy among many available to writers for the stage. The Actor as Playwright provides an alternative to the debate between traditional and materialist readers of early modern dramatic authorship, arguing that both approaches are weakened by a reluctance to look outside the Shakespearean canon for evidence.


 

ISBN 521824168
ISBN13 9780521824163
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Format Hardback
Publication date 26/06/2003
Pages 216
Weight (grammes) 502
Published in United Kingdom
Height (mm) 228
Width (mm) 152

List of illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: playing author
1. Publishing the fool: Robert Armin and the collective production of mirth
2. The actor-playwright and the true poet: Nathan Field, Ben Jonson and the prerogatives of the author
3. Anthony Munday and the spectacle of martyrdom
4. 'Some zanie with his mimick action': Thomas Heywood and the staging of humanist authority
Coda: the Shakespearean silence
Notes
Select bibliography
Index.