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Index of Persons, Places, and Subjects
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- List of Figures IX
- Acknowledgments XI
- Foreword: The Stage on the Shore XIII
- Chapter 1. Introduction: Edges, Spaces, and Intersections in Early Modern English Drama 1
-
Section I: Edges
- Chapter 2. A Life on the Edge: Richard Bradshaw 19
- Chapter 3. “Thou Dream’st Awake”: Ghosts and Sleep in Chapman’s Antonio’s Revenge and Marston’s Bussy D’Ambois 37
- Chapter 4. Canting Queer Ken: Stage Magic and the Edge of Knowledge 57
- Chapter 5. James Shirley at the Edge of Town 77
-
Section II: Spaces
- Chapter 6. “Our Queen Is Comming to the Town”: Child Actors and Counsel in the Elizabethan Progresses of 1574 and 1578 97
- Chapter 7. “And Huh, Too / For All Your Big Words!”: Language and Multiculturalism in Philip Massinger’s The Renegado 117
- Chapter 8. Inherited Insecurities and the Staging of Alterity: Islam in Marlowe’s Tamburlaine 135
- Chapter 9. “The End of All”: How a Forgotten Map Helped Us Forget Newington Butts 151
-
Section III: Intersections
- Chapter 10. Hamlet’s French Philosophy 177
- Chapter 11. “Then Turn Tail to Tail and Peace Be with You”: John Fletcher’s The Woman’s Prize, or The Tamer Tamed, Menippean Satire, and Same-Sex Desire 199
- Chapter 12. “Whose Plot Was This?”: Shakespearean Convergences in Fletcher’s The Wild-Goose Chase 219
- Chapter 13. “They Always Speak Things as They Would Have Them”: Aspirational Royalist Politics in Henry Killigrew’s Pallantus and Eudora (1653 237
- Notes on Contributors 259
- Index of Persons, Places, and Subjects 263
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents VII
- List of Figures IX
- Acknowledgments XI
- Foreword: The Stage on the Shore XIII
- Chapter 1. Introduction: Edges, Spaces, and Intersections in Early Modern English Drama 1
-
Section I: Edges
- Chapter 2. A Life on the Edge: Richard Bradshaw 19
- Chapter 3. “Thou Dream’st Awake”: Ghosts and Sleep in Chapman’s Antonio’s Revenge and Marston’s Bussy D’Ambois 37
- Chapter 4. Canting Queer Ken: Stage Magic and the Edge of Knowledge 57
- Chapter 5. James Shirley at the Edge of Town 77
-
Section II: Spaces
- Chapter 6. “Our Queen Is Comming to the Town”: Child Actors and Counsel in the Elizabethan Progresses of 1574 and 1578 97
- Chapter 7. “And Huh, Too / For All Your Big Words!”: Language and Multiculturalism in Philip Massinger’s The Renegado 117
- Chapter 8. Inherited Insecurities and the Staging of Alterity: Islam in Marlowe’s Tamburlaine 135
- Chapter 9. “The End of All”: How a Forgotten Map Helped Us Forget Newington Butts 151
-
Section III: Intersections
- Chapter 10. Hamlet’s French Philosophy 177
- Chapter 11. “Then Turn Tail to Tail and Peace Be with You”: John Fletcher’s The Woman’s Prize, or The Tamer Tamed, Menippean Satire, and Same-Sex Desire 199
- Chapter 12. “Whose Plot Was This?”: Shakespearean Convergences in Fletcher’s The Wild-Goose Chase 219
- Chapter 13. “They Always Speak Things as They Would Have Them”: Aspirational Royalist Politics in Henry Killigrew’s Pallantus and Eudora (1653 237
- Notes on Contributors 259
- Index of Persons, Places, and Subjects 263