Renaissance Drama 31: New Series XXXI 2002 Performing AffectPerforming Affect, Volume 31 of Renaissance Drama, examines the rehearsal of emotion on the Renaissance stage. These new essays consider the ways in which Renaissance plays represent emotional states, while also presenting new scholarship specifically on the performance of affect on the early modern stage. The essays thus consider the continuing effects of affect in early modern culture more broadly, beyond the thrust stage, asking the question: what are the instrumental and performative effects of Renaissance drama in a larger conception of Renaissance emotions? How do we reckon the effects of early modern drama and performance within a larger history of the emotive self? A number of these essays significantly press at the borders of the customary terms we use to denote emotional states, states for which the best early modern terms may well be affect and passions. Topics include: emotion and the humoral body; domestic abuse and trauma; the politics of onstage gesture; the relation of idolatry, desire, and necrophilia; the performance of such affective states as religious fervor, memory, jealousy, melancholy, and heroic masculinity. Renaissance Drama, an annual and interd |
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İçindekiler
Editorial Note | vii |
Submissions of Manuscripts | xi |
Rhetorical Husbandries and Portias True Conceit of Friendship | 3 |
The Gestural Politics of Counsel in The Spanish Tragedy | 27 |
Devotion Applause and Consent in Richard III | 61 |
Male Surplus Value | 85 |
Memory and Revision in Chapmans Bussy Plays | 125 |
The Anatomy of Abuses in Troilus and Cressida | 153 |
Melancholy Jealousy and Subjective Temporality in The Winters Tale | 185 |
The Corpse as Idol in The Second Maidens Tragedy | 215 |
Notes on Contributors | 245 |
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actor affective affirming amen argues audience Bassanio behavior Bevington body Bussy D’Ambois Bussy’s Cambridge University Press Chapman’s conciliar confirm conflict context Coriolanus corpse counselor Criseyde critical cultural defined definition desire Diomedes discourse Early Modern England Elizabethan emotional English essay figure final find first friendship gender gesture Govianus Henry Herod Hieronimo History homily humoral husband hypermasculinity identifies ideology J. L. Austin king King’s labor Lady Lady’s language Leontes London Maffé male marriage Marx masculinity melancholy memory Monsieur necrophilia notes Othello Oxford Pandarus performance play play’s political Polixenes Portia’s prayers production profit reading reflect Renaissance Renaissance Drama representation revenge revision rhetorical Richard Richard III Richmond’s role Routledge scene Second Maiden’s Tragedy sense sexual Shakespeare significance social sonnet Spanish Tragedy specific speech stage suggests surplus value Tamburlaine Tamyra’s temporal theater theatrical transvestism Troilus and Cressida Troilus’s Tudor Tyrant verbal abuse wife Winter’s Tale women words York