Historiography and ideology in Stuart drama

Historiography and ideology in Stuart drama1996
About this book
This study explores the Stuart history play, a genre often viewed as an inferior or degenerate version of the exemplary Elizabethan dramatic form. Writing in the shadow of Marlowe and Shakespeare, Stuart playwrights have traditionally been evaluated through the aesthetic assumptions and political concerns of the sixteenth century. Ivo Kamps's study traces the development of Jacobean drama in the radically changed literary and political environment of the seventeenth century.
He shows how historiographical developments in this period materially affected the structure of the history play. As audiences became increasingly skeptical of the comparatively simple teleological narratives of the Tudor era, a demand for new ways of staging history emerged. Kamps demonstrates how Stuart drama capitalized on this new awareness of historical narrative to undermine inherited forms of literary and political authority.
Historiography and ideology in Stuart drama is the first sustained attempt to account for a neglected genre, and a sophisticated reading of the relationship between literature, history, and political power.
Details
- First published
- 1996
- OL Work ID
- OL3262510W
Subjects
English Historical dramaEnglish Political playsEnglish dramaHistorical drama, EnglishHistoriographyHistoryHistory and criticismLiterature and historyPolitical plays, EnglishPolitics and governmentPolitics and literatureEnglish drama, history and criticism, 17th centuryHistorical drama, history and criticismGreat britain, politics and government, 1603-1714Great britain, historiographyDRAMAEnglish, Irish, Scottish, Welsh