Mary Queen of Scots in nineteenth and twentieth century drama : poetic license with history

Bibliographic Information

Mary Queen of Scots in nineteenth and twentieth century drama : poetic license with history

Pearl J. Brandwein

(American university studies, Series 19 . General literature ; vol. 13)

P. Lang, 1989

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Bibliography: p. [253]-257

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Homage, hatred, and historical license underscore the tragedy of Mary, Queen of Scots. Acclaimed for centuries, her magnetic personna as both a queen and a woman has been immortalized through the works of many world renowned authors. Their vision and recreation of her extraordinary life and death is put into literary and historical perspective for the reader. The quarter centenary of her death (1987) marks her victory as a preeminent figure for all time.

Table of Contents

Contents: Dr. Brandwein's book, Mary Queen of Scots in Nineteenth and twentieth century Drama: Poetic License with History is a valuable, informative, and comprehensive study of the dramatic interpretations of the politics of power (Mary vs. Elizabeth), religion (Mary vs. John Knox), and passion (Mary and Darnley and Bothwell). Historical personnas come to life in the dramas of Friedrich Schiller, Pierre-Antoine Lebrun, Juljusz Slowacki, Bjrnsterne Bjornson, Algernon Swinburne. Maxwell Anderson, and Robert Bolt among others. This book is a must for those readers interested in the timeliness of the subject matter (this is the quarter centenary of Mary Stuart's courageous and tragic death on February 8, 1587 and its invaluable insights.)

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