
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editorial
- The Funeral of Walter Scott, First Earl of Buccleuch: A Grand Ceremonial Occasion
- The Bright Star of the North: James I and his English Coronation
- ‘Ye know eek that in forme of speche is change’: Chaucer, Henryson, and the Welsh Troelus a Chresyd
- Playing the Crucifixion in Medieval Wales
- ‘My Boy shall Knowe Himself from Other Men’: Active Spectating, Annunciation, and the St John's College Narcissus
- ‘I Speke so Miche to Ȝow’: Authority, Didacticism, and Audience Address in Middle English Sermons and Morality Plays
- Early English Spectatorship and the ‘Cognitive Turn’
- The Theatre of the Mind in Late-Medieval England
- Poetics and Beyond: Noisy Bodies and Aural Variations in Medieval English Outdoor Performance
- Women and the Performance of Libel in Early-Modern
- Abraham Sacrifiant
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Editorial
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editorial
- The Funeral of Walter Scott, First Earl of Buccleuch: A Grand Ceremonial Occasion
- The Bright Star of the North: James I and his English Coronation
- ‘Ye know eek that in forme of speche is change’: Chaucer, Henryson, and the Welsh Troelus a Chresyd
- Playing the Crucifixion in Medieval Wales
- ‘My Boy shall Knowe Himself from Other Men’: Active Spectating, Annunciation, and the St John's College Narcissus
- ‘I Speke so Miche to Ȝow’: Authority, Didacticism, and Audience Address in Middle English Sermons and Morality Plays
- Early English Spectatorship and the ‘Cognitive Turn’
- The Theatre of the Mind in Late-Medieval England
- Poetics and Beyond: Noisy Bodies and Aural Variations in Medieval English Outdoor Performance
- Women and the Performance of Libel in Early-Modern
- Abraham Sacrifiant
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
Volume 38 enshrines the second part of the Festschrift presented to John McGavin at the METh meeting at Southampton in 2015. A stimulating and varied collection of papers, it again celebrates the breadth and influence of John's interests — and naturally, with a Scottish bent.
The first two papers, by Alice Hunt and Eila Williamson, show how a coronation (of James I and VI) and a funeral (of ‘bold Buccleuch’) spoke to their audiences through ceremonial and its carefully devised trappings. The scene then shifts to Wales: Sue Niebrzydowski describes a Welsh play of Troelus a Chresyd which drew its plot from both Chaucer and Henryson, while David Klausner attempts to disentangle the events behind the reportage of what was possibly an early monastic Crucifixion play. A group of essays addresses audience and spectatorship. Elisabeth Dutton juxtaposes an Annunciation by Fra Lippo Lippi with a seemingly incongruous partner, the St John's College 1602 student play of Narcissus showcased at the Southampton METh meeting, to consider the nature of spectatorship and self-realisation both inside and outside a work of art. Charlotte Steenbrugge convincingly challenges the too-easy assumption that the modes of audience address in morality plays must be the same as those of sermons. Nadia van Pelt calls on cognitive science to assess how new theories can contribute to our analysis of multiple spectator reactions. Mishtooni Bose explores ‘the drama of performed thought’ in didactic dialogue-plays, in which an apparent impasse can enable a leap of thought which opens up new ground. Pamela M. King offers a reconstruction of the soundscape, intentional and peripheral, of the York Corpus Christi Play. Clare Egan tackles an unexpected form of performance, the publication of libels, using the rich but underexplored resource of reports of Star Chamber cases from Devon. Finally, we are honoured to be able to present David Mills’ last article, intended for the Festschrift and dictated to Joy Mills, on the Abraham Sacrifiant of Theodore Bèze.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Medieval English Theatre 38The Best Pairt of our Play. Essays presented to John J. McGavin. Part II, pp. 1 - 2Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017