Image for Games and Theatre in Shakespeare's England

Games and Theatre in Shakespeare's England

Part of the Cultures of Play series
See all formats and editions

Games and Theatre in Shakespeare's England brings together theories of play and game with theatre and performance to produce new understandings of the history and design of early modern English drama.

Through literary analysis and embodied practice, an international team of distinguished scholars examines a wide range of games—from dicing to bowling to role-playing to videogames—to uncover their fascinating ramifications for the stage in Shakespeare’s era and our own.

Foregrounding ludic elements challenges the traditional view of drama as principally mimesis, or imitation, revealing stageplays to be improvisational experiments and participatory explorations into the motive, means, and value of recreation.

Delving into both canonical masterpieces and hidden gems, this innovative volume stakes a claim for play as the crucial link between games and early modern theatre, and for the early modern theatre as a critical site for unraveling the continued cultural significance and performative efficacy of gameplay today.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£99.45 Save 15.00%
RRP £117.00
Product Details
Amsterdam University Press
9463723250 / 9789463723251
Hardback
822.33
05/10/2021
Netherlands
332 pages, 1 Illustrations, black and white
156 x 234 mm