Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Aristotle and Tragicomedy
- 2 The Difficult Emergence of Pastoral Tragicomedy: Guarini's Il pastor fido and its Critical Reception in Italy, 1586–1601
- 3 Transporting Tragicomedy: Shakespeare and the Magical Pastoral of the Commedia Dell'arte
- 4 The Minotaur of the Stage: Tragicomedy in Spain
- 5 Highly Irregular: Defining Tragicomedy in Seventeenth-Century France
- 6 In Lieu of Democracy, or How Not To Lose Your Head: Theatre and Authority in Renaissance England
- 7 Taking Pericles Seriously
- 8 ‘The Neutral Term’?: Shakespearean Tragicomedy and the Idea of the ‘Late Play’
- 9 Shakespeare by the Numbers: On the Linguistic Texture of the Late Plays
- 10 Turn and Counterturn: Merchanting, Apostasy and Tragicomic Form in Massinger's The Renegado
- 11 Dublin Tragicomedy and London Stages
- 12 ‘Betwixt Both’: Sketching the Borders of Seventeenth-Century Tragicomedy
- Index
- Studies in Renaissance Literature
6 - In Lieu of Democracy, or How Not To Lose Your Head: Theatre and Authority in Renaissance England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Aristotle and Tragicomedy
- 2 The Difficult Emergence of Pastoral Tragicomedy: Guarini's Il pastor fido and its Critical Reception in Italy, 1586–1601
- 3 Transporting Tragicomedy: Shakespeare and the Magical Pastoral of the Commedia Dell'arte
- 4 The Minotaur of the Stage: Tragicomedy in Spain
- 5 Highly Irregular: Defining Tragicomedy in Seventeenth-Century France
- 6 In Lieu of Democracy, or How Not To Lose Your Head: Theatre and Authority in Renaissance England
- 7 Taking Pericles Seriously
- 8 ‘The Neutral Term’?: Shakespearean Tragicomedy and the Idea of the ‘Late Play’
- 9 Shakespeare by the Numbers: On the Linguistic Texture of the Late Plays
- 10 Turn and Counterturn: Merchanting, Apostasy and Tragicomic Form in Massinger's The Renegado
- 11 Dublin Tragicomedy and London Stages
- 12 ‘Betwixt Both’: Sketching the Borders of Seventeenth-Century Tragicomedy
- Index
- Studies in Renaissance Literature
Summary
THIS CHAPTER traces a journey that began for me in 1996 at the Globe Theatre in London when I became dramaturg for a production of Richard Edwards's play, Damon and Pythias. This, the first designated tragicomedy to be written in English, had its likely first performance at court by the children of the Chapel Royal during Christmas 1564–65. It is thus twenty years earlier than Guarini's Il Pastor Fido, and more than forty years earlier than The Faithful Shepherdess, John Fletcher's version of Guarini, and the play with which most critical accounts of tragicomedy in England begin. Edwards's play, by contrast, has nothing whatsoever to do with shepherds. Instead, it owes its genesis and literary theory to the city plays of Terence and Plautus, and to the urbanity of Horace's Defence of Poetry, whose authority is acknowledged and appealed to in the Prologue: ‘If this offend the lookers-on, let Horace then be blamed’ (D&P, Prologue 24). It is, however, set in Sicily which, ever since Theocritus wrote his Idylls, has seemed the natural home of the pastoral poetry with which tragicomedy has been most often associated because of Horace's brief, rule-breaking reference to the allowability of mixing humour and tragedy in satyr plays. Edwards thus seems aware of the issues and negotiates a minefield of classical and contemporary literary theory with wit and aplomb.
My journey progressed via work on The Comedy of Errors and Cymbeline, and this chapter will end with Marlowe's Dr Faustus, but in the bathetic nature of tragicomedy it had its comically cathartic moment while I was driving to work, listening to the radio, when I encountered Evita Bezuidenhout for the first time.
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- Information
- Early Modern Tragicomedy , pp. 84 - 100Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2007