
ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Edinburgh University Press
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9781474415118
RRP: £70.00
PAGES: 248
PUBLICATION DATE:
October 31, 2016
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Metadrama and the Informer in Shakespeare and Jonson
Bill Angus
Have you ever wondered what was really going on in the inner-plays, secret overhearing, and tacit observations of early modern drama? Taking on the shadowy figure of the early modern informer, this book argues that far more than mere artistic experimentation is happening here. In case studies of metadramatic plays, and the devices which Shakespeare and Jonson constantly revisit, this book offers critical insight into intrinsic connections between informers and authors, discovering an uneasy sense of common practice at the core of the metadrama, which drives both its self-awareness and its paranoia. Drama is most self-revealing at these moments where it reflects upon its own dramatic register: where it is most metadramatic. To understand their metadrama is therefore to understand these most seminal authors in a new way.
Bill Angus
Bill Angus taught at various UK universities before moving to New Zealand in 2013 and lectures mainly in the early modern period. He is currently researching representations of the crossroads as a site with transformative power and a place of spiritual binding and loosing, in early modern and other cultures. This encompasses histories of wandering, place magic, judicial execution, the regulation of burial, religious ritual, and theories of space and liminality.