Available Formats
Early Modern Theatre and the Figure of Disability
By (Author) Genevieve Love
Series edited by Professor Tanya Pollard
Series edited by Professor Lisa Hopkins
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
The Arden Shakespeare
18th October 2018
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
Theatre studies
822.3093561
Hardback
224
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
354g
What work did physically disabled characters do for the early modern theatre Through a consideration of a range of plays, including Doctor Faustus and Richard III, Genevieve Love argues that the figure of the physically disabled prosthetic body in early modern English theatre mediates a set of related likeness problems that structure the theatrical, textual, and critical lives of the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. The figure of disability stands for the relationship between actor and character: prosthetic disabled characters with names such as Cripple and Stump capture the simultaneous presence of thefictional and the material, embodied world of the theatre. When the figure of the disabled body exits the stage, it also mediates a second problem of likeness, between plays in their performed and textual forms. While supposedly imperfect textual versions of plays have been characterized as lame, the dynamic movement of prosthetic disabled characters in the theatre expands the figural role which disability performs in the relationship between plays on the stage and on the page. Early Modern Theatre and the Figure of Disability reveals how attention to physical disability enriches our understanding of early modern ideas about how theatre works, while illuminating in turn how theatre offers a reframing of disability as metaphor.
This monograph is important both for performance studies scholars and for literary historians of disability. * Theatre Journal *
Love promotes the figure of disability as the key figure for the ways that early modern theatre imagined itself, a figuration of and for figuration this book is a stunner from the very first word to the final full stop. -- Professor Paul Menzer, Mary Baldwin University, USA
Genevieve Love is Associate Professor of English at Colorado College, USA. Her work has appeared in journals including Renaissance Drama, Upstart, Shakespeare Bulletin, and Literature Compass, and in essay collections including Richard II: New Critical Essays, edited by Jeremy Lopez (2012) and Christopher Marlowe, Repertorial Commerce, and the Book Trade, edited by Roslyn Knutson and Kirk Melnikoff (2018).