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dc.contributor.authorBloomfield, Jeremy Charlesen_GB
dc.date.accessioned2011-11-03T16:19:04Zen_GB
dc.date.accessioned2013-03-21T10:35:30Z
dc.date.issued2011-06-28en_GB
dc.description.abstractThis thesis investigates the ways in which Webster’s Duchess of Malfi has been framed and interpreted, selecting various case studies from the four hundred years of the play’s history. It analyses the way in which a number of discourses have been brought to bear upon the play to delimit and shape its meanings, in the absence of a powerful determining author-figure such as Shakespeare. The investigation is organised around three “strands”, or elements which reappear in the commentary on the play. These are “pastness”, the sense that the play is framed as belonging to an earlier era and resistant to being completely interpreted by the later theatrical context being used to reproduce it; “not-Shakespeare”, the way in which Malfi has been set up in opposition to a “Shakespearean” model of dramatic value, or folded into that model; and “the dominance of the Duchess”, the tendency for the central character to act as a focus for the play’s perceived meanings. It identifies and analyses the co-opting of these elements in the service of wildly varying cultural politics throughout the play’s history. Sited within the assumptions and practices of Early Modern performance studies, this thesis constitutes an intervention in the field, demonstrating the possibility of a radically decentred approach. Such an approach is freed from either a reliance on Shakespeare as a prototypical model from which other works are imagined as diverging, or from the progressive narrative of theatre history in which twentieth century scholars “discovered” the true inherent meaning of early modern drama which had been “obscured” by the intervening centuries of theatre practice. It reveals blindspots and weaknesses in the existing Shakespeare-centred conception of the field, and opens up new possibilities for understanding Early Modern drama in historical and contemporary performance.en_GB
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10036/3257en_GB
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherUniversity of Exeteren_GB
dc.rights.embargoreasonI require this time to prepare my research for publication.en_GB
dc.subjectTheatre historyen_GB
dc.subjectPerformance studiesen_GB
dc.subjectDuchess of Malfien_GB
dc.subjectJohn Websteren_GB
dc.title"I am Duchess of Malfi still": The Framing of Webster's "The Duchess of Malfi"en_GB
dc.typeThesis or dissertationen_GB
dc.date.available2013-05-31T03:00:17Z
dc.contributor.advisorAebischer, Pascaleen_GB
dc.contributor.advisorMilling, Janeen_GB
dc.publisher.departmentEnglishen_GB
dc.type.degreetitlePhD in Englishen_GB
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoralen_GB
dc.type.qualificationnamePhDen_GB


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