Image for Reading adaptations  : novels and verse narratives on the stage, 1790-1840

Reading adaptations : novels and verse narratives on the stage, 1790-1840

See all formats and editions

An introduction to the widespread and popular practice of stage adaptation in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Through a series of specific case studies, the book offers readings of stage versions of works by writers such as William Godwin, Walter Scott and Charles Dickens, and establishes important contexts within which to view the production and reception of the period's canonical literature.

The plays engage with the original texts' treatment of issues such as social and political justice, the construction of individual and national identity, and the emergence of the professional writer.Adaptations created both a literal and metaphorical site for public debate about a text's meaning and significance and, taken as a whole, the plays discussed within the present study allow an insight into the development of modern distinctions between "literary" and "popular" culture.

The book's argument demonstrates the significance of theatrical adaptation for an improved understanding of the cultural complexity of the romantic period and rediscovers a fascinating but neglected area of literary production.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Manchester University Press
0719053404 / 9780719053405
Boards
822.009
23/03/2000
England
English
vii, 184p.
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More