Telltale Women

Telltale Women Chronicling Gender in Early Modern Historiography - Women and Gender in the Early Modern World

Hardback (01 Jan 2021)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Telltale Women fundamentally reimagines the relationship between the history play and its source material as an intertextual one, presenting evidence for a new narrative about how-and why-these genres disparately chronicle the histories of royal women. Allison Machlis Meyer challenges established perceptions of source study, historiography, and the staging of gender politics in well-known drama by arguing that chronicles and political histories frequently value women's political interventions and use narrative techniques to invest their voices with authority. Dramatists who used these sources for their history plays thus encountered a historical record that offered surprisingly ample precedents for depicting women's perspectives and political influence as legitimate, and writers for the commercial theater grappled with such precedents by reshaping source material to create stage representations of royal women that condemned queenship and female power.

By tracing how the sanctioning of women's political participation changes from the narrative page to the dramatic stage, Meyer demonstrates that gender politics in both canonical and noncanonical history plays emerge from playwrights' intertextual engagements with a rich alternative view of women in the narrative historiography of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

 

Book information

ISBN: 9781496208491
Publisher: Nebraska
Imprint: University of Nebraska Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 822.3093522
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: xi, 335
Weight: 685g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 24mm