Three Restoration Comedies

Three Restoration Comedies

Author: George Etherege

Publisher: Penguin UK

Published: 2005-11-24

Total Pages: 720

ISBN-13: 0141937742

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After the restoration of King Charles II to the British throne in 1660, dramatists experienced new freedom in an age that broke from the strict morality of puritan rule and in which elegance and wit became the chief virtues. Irreverent, licentious and cynical, the three plays collected here hold up a mirror to this dazzling era and satirize the gulf between appearances and reality. In Etherege's The Man of Mode (1676), the womanizing Dorimant meets his match when he falls in love with the unpretentious Harriet, while Wycherley's The Country Wife (c. 1675) depicts the rakish Horner who fakes impotence to fool trusting husbands into giving him easy access to their wives. And in Congreve's Love for Love (1695), the extravagant Valentine can only win his beloved Angelica if he loses his inheritance.


Moral Reform in Comedy and Culture, 1696–1747

Moral Reform in Comedy and Culture, 1696–1747

Author: Dr Aparna Gollapudi

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 2013-05-28

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13: 1409478793

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In the first half of the eighteenth century, a new comic plot formula dramatizing the moral reform of a flawed protagonist emerged on the English stage. The comic reform plot was not merely a generic turn towards morality or sentimentality, Aparna Gollapudi argues, but an important social mechanism for controlling and challenging political and economic changes. Gollapudi looks at reform comedies by dramatists such as Colley Cibber, Susanna Centlivre, Richard Steele, Charles Johnson, and Benjamin Hoadly in relation to emergent trends in finance capitalism, imperial nationalism, political factionalism, domestic ideology, and middling class-consciousness. Within the context of the cultural anxieties engendered by these developments, Gollapudi suggests, the reform comedies must be seen not as clichéd and moralistic productions but as responses to vital ideological shifts and cultural transvaluations that impose a reassuring moral schema on everyday conduct. Thoroughly researched and elegantly written, Gollapudi's study shows that reform comedies covered a range of contemporary concerns from party politics to domestic harmony and are crucial for understanding eighteenth-century literature and culture.


Comic character in Restoration drama

Comic character in Restoration drama

Author: Agnes V. Persson

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2019-03-18

Total Pages: 152

ISBN-13: 3111655245

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No detailed description available for "Comic character in Restoration drama".


Theatre and Ghosts

Theatre and Ghosts

Author: M. Luckhurst

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-07-15

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13: 1137345071

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Theatre and Ghosts brings theatre and performance history into dialogue with the flourishing field of spectrality studies. Essays examine the histories and economies of the material operations of theatre, and the spectrality of performance and performer.


British Dramatists from Dryden to Sheridan

British Dramatists from Dryden to Sheridan

Author: George Winchester Stone

Publisher: SIU Press

Published: 1975

Total Pages: 980

ISBN-13: 9780809307432

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Representative selections from Restoration and eighteenth-century drama, comedy, satire, tragedy, and farce are prefaced by descriptions of the theaters, acting styles, methods of play production, and audiences.


The Cultural Milieu of Addison's Literary Criticism

The Cultural Milieu of Addison's Literary Criticism

Author: Lee Andrew Elioseff

Publisher: University of Texas Press

Published: 2014-09-01

Total Pages: 267

ISBN-13: 0292772742

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The whole history of literary criticism is illuminated by this analysis of one English critic’s work. It is, in effect, a literary case study presented as partial answer to the complicated question: what cultural conditions are conducive to the development of a particular theory of literature? Initially, Lee Andrew Elioseff defines four difficult responsibilities of the historian of criticism: the interpretation of his material in terms of all the cultural circumstances that produced it; elimination of the purely chance elements, such as private feuds and unimportant personal tastes; consideration of those aspects of criticism that best indicate the dominant critical opinions of the age and the principles that are leading it; and illumination of the present critical situation. Concentrating upon the first three of these obligations, Elioseff seeks the sources of modern literary criticism in the works of Joseph Addison and his contemporaries, analyzing with great care and accuracy their responses to problems—both literary and nonliterary—in their culture. From the analysis, Addison emerges as a very significant figure: a critic who moved from Renaissance and neoclassical humanism and became one of the most important predecessors of romantic criticism; a formulator of what was to become the “emotive strain” in literary criticism; an essayist who raised many problems shared by the “modern” psychological critic whose immediate concern is the effect of the literature upon its audience. Drawing abundantly from a wide knowledge of philosophy, literature, and history, and exercising an incisive critical acumen, Elioseff discusses Addison’s criticism in three aspects: “The Critical Milieu,” an interpretation of Addison’s relation to his age as it influenced his views on tragedy, epic poetry, and ballads; “Addison and Eighteenth-Century England,” a consideration of contemporary political thought, morals, and theology; and the “Empirical Tradition,” an analysis of Addison’s critical views as expressed in The Pleasures of the Imagination.


Author:

Publisher: CUP Archive

Published:

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13:

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