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12 - A guide to criticism of medieval English theatre

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Richard Beadle
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

CRITICAL APPROACHES

NINETEENTH- AND TWENTIETH-CENTURY OUTLINES

The English drama that preceded Shakespeare was held in such disrepute for four centuries that it has been necessary for the twentieth to invent the concept 'medieval drama'. Both words show the needs and aspirations of our time, the adjective reflecting a concept of medieval society which need not be either romanticised or patronised, and the noun embodying the profound experiences of the twentieth-century theatre. The latter have been influential in both the performing of the early plays and the redefinition of drama.

The invention of the term 'medieval drama' cannot be attributed to one person, but it is the business of the first part of this guide to consider a number of authors whose work forced a revaluation of the plays and made them seem, as they now do, one of the riches of English culture in spite of their rather chancy survival. The second part deals with a number of special topics indispensable to the study of the plays, and embracing in differing ways the changing corpus of ideas which forms the basis of our understanding and appreciation of the early plays.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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