The Englishman Return'd from Paris ... A Farce in Two Acts [and in Prose].
Author : Samuel FOOTE
Publisher :
Page : 134 pages
File Size : 19,5 MB
Release : 1756
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Author : Samuel FOOTE
Publisher :
Page : 134 pages
File Size : 19,5 MB
Release : 1756
Category :
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Author : Samuel Foote
Publisher :
Page : 36 pages
File Size : 50,5 MB
Release : 1756
Category : English drama (Comedy)
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Author :
Publisher :
Page : 630 pages
File Size : 11,36 MB
Release : 1881
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Author : British Museum. Department of Printed Books
Publisher :
Page : 1028 pages
File Size : 26,53 MB
Release : 1887
Category : English literature
ISBN :
Author : Lisa A. Freeman
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 308 pages
File Size : 35,87 MB
Release : 2002
Category : Drama
ISBN : 0812236394
If the whole world acted the player, how did the player act the world? In Character's Theater, Lisa A. Freeman uses this question to test recent critical discussion of eighteenth-century literature and culture. Much current work, she observes, focuses on the concept of theatricality as both the governing metaphor of social life and a primary filter of psychic perception. Hume's "theater of the mind," Adam Smith's "impartial spectator," and Diderot's "tableaux" are all invoked by theorists to describe a process whereby the private individual comes to internalize theatrical logic and apprehend the self as other. To them theatricality is a critical mechanism of modern subjectivity but one that needs to be concealed if the subject's stability is to be maintained. Finding that much of this discussion about the "Age of the Spectator" has been conducted without reference to the play texts or actual theatrical practice, Freeman turns to drama and discovers a dynamic model of identity based on eighteenth-century conceptualizations of character. In contrast to the novel, which cultivated psychological tensions between private interiority and public show, dramatic characters in the eighteenth century experienced no private thoughts. The theater of the eighteenth century was not a theater of absorption but rather a theater of interaction, where what was monitored was not the depth of character, as in the novel, but the arc of a genre over the course of a series of discontinuous acts. In a genre-by-genre analysis of plays about plays, tragedy, comedies of manners, humours, and intrigue, and sentimental comedy, Freeman offers an interpretive account of eighteenth-century drama and its cultural work and demonstrates that by deploying an alternative model of identity, theater marked a site of resistance to the rise of the subject and to the ideological conformity enforced through that identity formation.
Author : Philip H. Highfill
Publisher : SIU Press
Page : 444 pages
File Size : 22,40 MB
Release : 1973
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 9780809311309
Those featured in Volume 10 include Margaret Martyr, a singer, actress, and dancer whose "conjugal virtues were often impeached," according to the July 1792Thespian Magazine. The Dictionary describes this least constant of lovers as "of middling height, with a figure well-proportioned for breeches parts. [Her] black-haired, black-eyed beauty and clear soprano made her an immediate popular success in merry maids and tuneful minxes, the piquant and the pert, for a quarter century."
Author : Frederick Wilse Bateson
Publisher : CUP Archive
Page : 1132 pages
File Size : 47,78 MB
Release : 1940
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Author : New York Public Library. Research Libraries
Publisher :
Page : 546 pages
File Size : 50,55 MB
Release : 1979
Category : Library catalogs
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Author : Tobias Smollett
Publisher :
Page : 594 pages
File Size : 20,96 MB
Release : 1756
Category : Books
ISBN :
Author : British Museum. Dept. of Printed Books
Publisher :
Page : 408 pages
File Size : 32,4 MB
Release : 1961
Category : English imprints
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