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6. “To catch the fellow, and come back again”. Games of Prisoner’s Base in Early Modern English Drama
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Bethany Packard
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 7
- List of Illustrations 9
- Acknowledgments 15
- Introduction. A Passion for Games 17
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Part I: Chess and Luxury Playing Cards
- 1. “Mad Chess” with a Mad Dwarf Jester 75
- 2. Changing Hands. Jean Desmarets, Stefano della Bella, and the Jeux de Cartes 93
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Part II: Gambling and Games of Chance
- 3. “A game played home”. The Gendered Stakes of Gambling in Shakespeare’s Plays 119
- 4. “Now if the devil have bones,/ These dice are made of his”. Dice Games on the English Stage in the Seventeenth Century 139
- 5. The World Upside Down. Giuseppe Maria Mitelli’s Games and the Performance of Identity in the Early Modern World 157
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Part III: Outdoor and Sportive Games
- 6. “To catch the fellow, and come back again”. Games of Prisoner’s Base in Early Modern English Drama 183
- 7. Against Opposition (at Home). Middleton and Rowley’s The World Tossed at Tennis as Tennis 203
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Part IV: Games on Display
- 8. Ordering the World. Games in the Architectural Iconography of Stirling Castle, Scotland 221
- 9. The Games of Philipp Hainhofer. Ludic Appreciation and Use in Early Modern Art Cabinets 249
- Index 277
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 7
- List of Illustrations 9
- Acknowledgments 15
- Introduction. A Passion for Games 17
-
Part I: Chess and Luxury Playing Cards
- 1. “Mad Chess” with a Mad Dwarf Jester 75
- 2. Changing Hands. Jean Desmarets, Stefano della Bella, and the Jeux de Cartes 93
-
Part II: Gambling and Games of Chance
- 3. “A game played home”. The Gendered Stakes of Gambling in Shakespeare’s Plays 119
- 4. “Now if the devil have bones,/ These dice are made of his”. Dice Games on the English Stage in the Seventeenth Century 139
- 5. The World Upside Down. Giuseppe Maria Mitelli’s Games and the Performance of Identity in the Early Modern World 157
-
Part III: Outdoor and Sportive Games
- 6. “To catch the fellow, and come back again”. Games of Prisoner’s Base in Early Modern English Drama 183
- 7. Against Opposition (at Home). Middleton and Rowley’s The World Tossed at Tennis as Tennis 203
-
Part IV: Games on Display
- 8. Ordering the World. Games in the Architectural Iconography of Stirling Castle, Scotland 221
- 9. The Games of Philipp Hainhofer. Ludic Appreciation and Use in Early Modern Art Cabinets 249
- Index 277