Early Performers and Performance in the Northeast of England
Diana Wyatt editor John McKinnell editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Arc Humanities Press
Published:31st May '21
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This collection explores the evidence for a wide variety of performance traditions up to 1642 in the northeast region of England which was among those most remote from London. While noble and religious houses in the northeast often patronized visiting performers and might be aware of developments in the capital, the region also had lively performance traditions of its own, on every level of society, from the wedding revels, sporting activities, and household fools of major noble families, through civic plays and processions, to the customary annual performances of hunters and ploughmen. The book considers the political, economic, religious, and psychological impulses that affected these traditions, and its closing chapter addresses their possible relevance to the culture of the region today.
Although the volume’s essays vary in length and ambition, their research quality and insightfulness are consistently high. Some of the most salient themes to emerge include the importance of great households as sites for performance; the cultural centrality and contested meanings of unscripted customs; and the connections among performance, religious beliefs, and controversy.[...] Medievalists should seek out this collection for its introduction to a trove of new primary sources and for its range of perspectives on important performance practices—urban, rural, scripted, and unscripted—spanning the medieval and early modern periods.
-- Nicole R. Rice * Speculum 99, no. 3 (July 2024): 970-ISBN: 9781641893442
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
248 pages
New edition