Puritanism and theatre : Thomas Middleton and opposition drama under the early Stuarts

Bibliographic Information

Puritanism and theatre : Thomas Middleton and opposition drama under the early Stuarts

Margot Heinemann

(Past and present publications)

Cambridge University Press, 1982, c1980

  • pbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The closing of the theatres by Parliament in 1642 is perhaps the best-known fact in the history of English drama. As the Parliamentary Puritans were then in power, it is easy to assume that all opponents of the theatre were Puritans, and that all Puritans were hostile to the drama. The reality was more interesting and more complicated. Margot Heinemann looks at Thomas Middleton's work in relation to the society and social movements of his time, and traces the connections this work may have had with radical, Parliamentarian or Puritan groups or movements. In the light of the recent work of seventeenth-century historians we can no longer see these complex opposition movements as uniformly anti-theatre or anti-dramatist. The book suggests fresh meanings and implications in Middleton's own writings, and helps towards rethinking the place of drama in the changing life of early Stuart England.

Table of Contents

  • Introductory note
  • 1. Time and place
  • 2. Puritanism, censorship and opposition to the theatre
  • 3. Middleton as satirical journalist
  • 4. Early satirical comedies
  • 5. How anti-Puritan are Middleton's city comedies?
  • 6. Money and morals in Middleton's city comedies
  • 7. Middle years: tragi-comedy and moral comedy
  • 8. City employments
  • 9. Hard times and Hengist, King of Kent
  • 10. Political satire: A Game at Chess
  • 11. City tragedy
  • 12. Drama and opposition, 1619-1640
  • 13. From popular drama to leveller style: a postscript
  • Appendices
  • Index.

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