A Cultural Studies Approach to Two Exotic Citizen Romances by Thomas HeywoodPeter Lang, 2001 - 159 Seiten Modern literary scholars have, for the most part, devoted little critical attention to that remarkable group of romance dramas featuring citizen heroes that flourished during the late Elizabethan period. Joseph Courtland's in-depth study remedies the situation by providing a fresh, cultural studies approach to this innovative hybrid of chivalric romance, viewing such adventure plays as literary works of colonial discourse within the mode of fantasy. Based principally on an approach to early modern romance as fantasy suggested by the writings of Tzvetan Todorov, Frederic Jameson, and Rosemary Jackson, the methodology employed in the analysis also incorporates the cultural materialist notion of Renaissance romance as colonial discourse. |
Inhalt
CHAPTER | 1 |
APPENDIX | 8 |
Selected Colonial Discourses | 12 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Andrews Anglo-Spanish conflict audience Barbary Bella Franca Bess Bouillon capital adventurism Captain Catholic Charles chivalric romance Christian imperialism Christopher Marlowe civility Clyomon and Sir colonial discourse conquest Crusade D'Amico decade Drama Elizabeth's reign England English Eustace exotic citizen fantasy exotic citizen romance Fair Maid fairy tale false hero forces Four Prentices Frederic Jameson genre George Peele Godfrey Goodlack heroic Heywood's History Hugh Hugh Roe O'Donnell important Ireland Irish Islamic Jackson Jameson Jerusalem kernes King knight lands late sixteenth-century Leo Africanus literary magic masterless medieval merchants military mode Moorish Moroccan Mullisheg Munster plantation narratives neo-chivalry Neronis O'Donnell O'Neill old Earl pagan page boy play popular Pory prentice heroes Prentices of London princes Propp reformation religious Renaissance revealed ruler ship Sir Clamydes Sir Clyomon social Spain Spanish Spenser structural tale roles Tancred Thomas Heywood Thomas Heywood's Todorov trade traditional travel literature Tudor Tyrone Ulster victory View villain