Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i The Revels Plays-serien

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  • - By Philip Massinger
    av Martin White
    280,-

    The first single-volume edition of this play in almost 500 years, widely rated by critics as Philip Massinger's best work -- .

  • - George Chapman
    av Charles Edelman
    266 - 1 166,-

    In this edition, an extensive introduction and commentary show how Chapman combines the literary and theatrical traditions of ancient Rome with everyday life in his own time to fashion a sparkling and innovative comedy that will delight audiences today as much as it did those of 1599. -- .

  •  
    288,-

    Examines an anonymous manuscript play that has long been the subject of scholarly dispute regarding its relationship with Shakespeare's "Richard II". This title situates the play within its historical and political context, relating it to the genre of chronicle drama to which it belongs.

  • - Thomas Heywood
     
    288,-

    Edward IV' was one of the most popular plays of the early modern period, making a vital contribution to the genres of both chronicle history and the newly emergent 'domestic' tragedy. It is a work rich with allusions to the political and cultural controversies of its time, and a drama which demonstrates a brilliant if unusual stagecraft. -- .

  • - Beaumont and Fletcher
     
    280,-

    This fully annotated version makes available on one of the most popular and influential plays by Beaumont and Fletcher, young contemporaries of Shakespeare. In discussing sources and stage history, the critical introduction challenges the common modern devaluation of these playwrights and offers a fresh, historically informed interpretation. -- .

  • - Ben Jonson
    av Ben Jonson
    280,-

    Intends to appraise Ben Jonson's much-neglected play and argues for its recognition as a work of real distinction.

  • - Ben Jonson
    av Ben Jonson
    288,-

    A comical satire about envy and aspiration amongst the ambitious middle classes, who think happiness is to be found in fame and material fortune. It exposes the importance of seeing and judging the world as it is and not being duped by its pretences.

  • - John Lyly
    av John Lyly
    280,-

    Two of John Lyly's most engaging plays -- .

  • - Thomas Middleton
    av Thomas Middleton
    280,-

    A play that offers an unusually cynical assessment of the social and familial displacements, and the alienation and loss of cultural memory so characteristic of life in the great metropolis of early modern London.

  • - By Ben Jonson
    av Ben Jonson
    276,-

    A lively and ambitious satire in which Ben Jonson takes a stand on various developments in later Jacobean society. It offers a modernised text based on a collation of the 1631-40 folio, together with an introduction and a commentary which sets Jonson's art in its social and intellectual context.

  • - By Ben Jonson
    av Ben Jonson
    177,-

    This new edition of Jonson's great Roman tragedy provides fresh information on the play, its author and the Jacobean text. The text is based on extensive collation of the 1605 and 161 version and takes the earlier version as "copy-text".

  • - Beaumont and Fletcher
    av John Fletcher & Francis Beaumont
    204,-

    Fully annotated edition of the most powerful of Beaumont and Fletcher's plays -- .

  • - Christopher Marlowe
    av Christopher Marlowe
    204,-

    Based on the 1633 quarto, which is shown to be more authentic than most scholars had allowed. The text includes an account of the sources of the play, with discussion of Marlowe's knowledge of Mediterranean history, and consideration of Elizabethan Machiavellianism.

  • - By Anthony Munday and Others
    av Anthony Munday
    382,-

    This is a critical edition of a famous theatrical document from the Elizabethan age. It indicates that the play "Sir Thomas More", far from being unfinished and chaotic, was stageworthy and well-constructed, the best extant example of the genre of biographical history.

  • - Thomas Middleton & Thomas Dekker
    av Paul Mulholland
    204,-

    An annotated edition of an important Jacobean comedy, which is currently receiving attention from critics and on stage because the leading character is based on a famous personality of the time, Moll Cutpurse.

  • - By Beaumont and Fletcher
    av John Fletcher & Francis Beaumont
    219,-

    Back in print after a lengthy absence, this is one of the most enduring plays of its time, edited by scholar and recent advisor to the Globe Theatre, Andrew Gurr. It joins the roster of "The Revels Plays", almost 30 of which are now in print.

  • - By John Webster
    av John Brown
    276,-

    An authoritative edition of one of the most popular plays in Elizabethan and Jacobean England -- .

  • - By John Marston
    av John Marston
    288,-

    This edition seeks to evaluate the play not merely as a literary text but as a drama for a particular company within a particular theatre. The introduction explores the degree of originality in Marston's dramatic techniques and establishes him as a leading innovator in the dramaturgy of his day.

  • - Chapman, Jonson and Marston
    av George Chapman
    280,-

    In the REVELS PLAYS series, this book contains the text of the play and also its history and background together with a critical interpretation that takes account of its social, historical and theatrical context. It examines the relationship between the three authors and the problem of their collaboration. Aimed at students of Renaissance drama.

  • - Ben Jonson
    av Tom Cain
    346,-

    Set in Ancient Rome, "Poetaster" offers one of the first and most subtle statements in English of the Augustan cultural ideal. Jonson contrasts Augustus' wise rule with an English polity dominated by malice, intrigue and envy. This text examines these different strands interwoven by Jonson.

  • - John Lyly
    av G.K. Hunter
    215,-

    One of a series of play texts by Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists other than Shakespeare, this volume discusses the plays "Campaspe" and "Sappho and Phao" by John Lyly. The series aims to throw light on the plays and to offer views of the plays that have been neglected in the past. -- .

  • - John Marston
     
    179,-

    A new in paperback edition of this first play by John Marston to be performed by the revived Paul's Company in 1599. Fully annotated with critical introduction and full commentary. -- .

  • - By Ben Jonson
    av Ben Jonson
    269,-

    States that "Epicene" is one of the most widely-studied of Johnson's plays. This book analyzed the play as originally written for the newly formed Children of the Queen's Revels, and performed at the little-known Whitefriars Theatre. It discusses the composition of the play, which took place during a critical period in Jonson's life and career.

  • - By John Ford
    av John Ford & A.T. Moore
    280,-

    Presents a commentary on "Love's Sacrifice". This book includes a survey of critical responses, an overview of the play, stage history, and a bibliography of relevant secondary material. It is of use to students of Early Modern drama to specialists in the field.

  • - Ben Jonson
    av Ben Jonson
    280,-

    The 1601 quarto version of Johnson's play, set in Florence -- .

  • - Christopher Marlowe
    av Christopher Marlowe
    280,-

    This fully annotated version, with parts one and two in a single volume, takes account of the recent work on Marlowe. This text is related to contemporary theatrical conventions and conditions, and offers a critical account of the play closely attuned to a sense of theatre.

  • - Thomas Middleton
    av T.H. Howard-Hill
    214,-

    This work offers the text of Middleton's neoclassical comedy of intrigue (rooted within the matrix of a traditional moral play), along with explanatory material on its documentary foundations, theatrical history and sources, a textual analysis and a literary assessment.

  • - Christopher Marlowe
    av Charles Forker
    219,-

    In the introduction to this edition, Forker offers a discussion of Marlowe's use of sources and presents a new argument for the drama's five-act structure. He examines the various opinions concerning the genre and sexual politics of the play, and also includes a full record of the stage history.

  • - Christopher Marlowe
    av Eric Rasmussen
    179,-

    This volume in the "Revel Plays" series, offers reading editions, with modern spelling, of the 1604 and 1616 editions of Marlowe's play, arguing that the two cannot be conflated into one. Included are sources and commentary, literary criticism, style and staging/performance assessments.

  • - By Lady Mary Wroth
     
    1 089,-

    Love's Victory is the first romantic comedy written in English by a woman, and this Revels edition is the first fully-authorised, modern spelling edition of this play by Lady Mary Wroth. -- .

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