Nicholas Rowe and the Beginnings of Feminism on the London StageNicholas Rowe flourished during the first quarter of the 18thc: he was poet laureate to George I, the author of eight plays(three of which were great successes) and he was the esteemed translator of Lucan's PHARSALIA as well as the first modern editor of Shakespeare's plays. But most of all he was known as a playwright. Rowe's 'She-tragedies" gave great prominence to women characters and further developed the Whig virtues of the ruling political elite: individual freedom and a belief in a strong parliament which would bring the cause of the people before a constitutionally limited, reasonable monarchy. Professor Sennett's new monograph discusses Rowe's vision of women caught up by tragic, unreasonable threat or menace. He also explores the literary and the political stakes in late Stuart and early Hanoverian theatre.. New material on Rowe's life and his attempt to include ideas that can be described as incipient feminism are brought forward. While not a general biography, Sennett's new work is a contribution to the scholarship that has called for a new examination of Rowe and the Whig London of the early 18th century. |
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Page 17
... issue of equality . Dobrée and Hart were literary trail - blazers in the early to mid - twentieth century , and they helped to open the doors of modern critical thinking for later scholars to move through . Their understandings were ...
... issue of equality . Dobrée and Hart were literary trail - blazers in the early to mid - twentieth century , and they helped to open the doors of modern critical thinking for later scholars to move through . Their understandings were ...
Page 47
... issue probably had nothing to do with whether or not women were capable of being actors , but may have simply been the result of women not being considered at all one way or another . The acting abilities of women were not at issue for ...
... issue probably had nothing to do with whether or not women were capable of being actors , but may have simply been the result of women not being considered at all one way or another . The acting abilities of women were not at issue for ...
Page 164
... issue this way : With Jane Grey , Rowe could stir an audience to oppose tyranny , and the danger of Catholicism , by showing her [ Lady Jane Grey ] pathetic position . He could please the audience which had mourned the plight of Jane ...
... issue this way : With Jane Grey , Rowe could stir an audience to oppose tyranny , and the danger of Catholicism , by showing her [ Lady Jane Grey ] pathetic position . He could please the audience which had mourned the plight of Jane ...
Contents
CHAPTER ONE BACKGROUND ON THE STUDY OF NICHOLAS | 11 |
CHAPTER TWO THE BEGINNINGS OF ROWES CAREER | 25 |
CHAPTER THREE CHALLENGES FOR ACTRESSES | 47 |
Copyright | |
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