Death and Domesticity: Reassessing Domestic Dramas of the Renaissance

Brent Griffin
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Such are the recurrent chords played by Resurgens Theatre Company, a professional original practices troupe that performs rarely produced plays of the English Renaissance. The essays collected in this special issue of <em>Studies in the Literary Imagination</em> developed from their Death and Domesticity Conference at the Shakespeare Tavern Playhouse in Atlanta, Georgia, on September 28 and 29, 2018. The occasion marked Resurgens’ second academic conference on the verse dramas of Shakespeare’s contemporaries,<sup>1</sup> and called for submissions that examined some aspect of Renaissance-era domestic tragedies, including topics involving the effect of murder plays on performance and/or early modern print culture. Participants traveled from across the US, as well as the UK, each presenting diverse material that matched Resurgens’ deep-cut ethos admirably.<sup>2</sup></p> <p>Highly popular during the period, domestic dramas have been long since overshadowed by genres more typically associated with the Elizabethan/Jacobean stage, specifically, those derived from categories listed in Shakespeare’s 1623 Folio—comedies, histories, and tragedies. Indeed, the Bard’s status as the premier cultural paradigm for “not [only] an age, but for all time” continues to govern our institutionalized understanding of Renaissance drama (not surprisingly, with a substantial Shakespeare industry working nonstop to shape the content of our conferences, course offerings, journals, monographs, textbooks, etc.). Nevertheless, as these essays illustrate, recent scholarship suggests a move away from narrow bardocentric interests and toward a renewed examination of non-Shakespearean playwrights, playing companies, playing conditions, and types of plays. The busy workshops of early modern poet-practitioners—the numerous playhouses of London (more than just the Globe <strong>[End Page v]</strong> and Blackfriars, to be sure)—supply the inspiration and innovation necessary for generations of theatre artists to thrive, and a strong argument can be made that the greater dramatic influence belongs to Shakespeare’s rival dramatists, brand name recognition notwithstanding. At the very least, we cannot hope to evaluate the merits of their disparate output (or Shakespeare’s, for that matter) without analyzing the comparative traits and distinguishing aspects of each. And since domestic dramas are not represented in the 1623 Folio (with the arguable exception of <em>Othello</em>), the need to reassess the theatrical prominence of these plays during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, along with future repercussions heretofore obscured, becomes especially clear.</p> <p>By definition, domestic dramas or bourgeois tragedies depict incidents drawn from everyday life—ordinary people placed in heightened circumstances, usually with tragic results. Private households furnish the setting for a new form of public entertainment, uniquely English in style and scope, that blurs the line between conventional notions of tragedy and its actual representation in period theatres. The Aristotelian/Senecan model that Shakespeare routinely follows (that is, the tragic blueprint requiring the fall of princes and the fate of nations hanging in the balance) hardly reflects the commonplace dynamic present in these slice-of-life plays. In the same spirit of Marlowe’s <em>Doctor Faustus</em>, which rejects the “courts of kings where state is overturned, / Nor in the pomp of proud audacious deeds” (Prologue 4–5), domestic tragedians, like Heywood in <em>A Woman Killed with Kindness</em>, direct their audiences to “Look for no glorious state; our Muse is bent / Upon a barren subject” (Prologue 3–4). This purposeful reduction in dramatic scale not only better conforms to the spatial and dramaturgical particulars of Renaissance playhouses, but also resonates more strongly with playgoers seeking relatable material reimagined from daily affairs—all portrayed with a remarkably un-Shakespearean attentiveness to the smallest detail (Heywood’s stage directions include the entrance of a character “<em>brushing the crumbs from his clothes with a napkin, [as if] newly risen from supper</em>” [8.22]). Predating Arthur Miller’s “Tragedy and the Common Man” by over three centuries...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":501368,"journal":{"name":"Studies in the Literary Imagination","volume":"91 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Studies in the Literary Imagination","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/sli.2021.a917126","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Death and Domesticity: Reassessing Domestic Dramas of the Renaissance
  • Brent Griffin (bio)

“[T]o call back yesterday; / That Time could turn up his swift sandy glass / To untell the days, and to redeem these hours” (13.48–50): Thomas Heywood’s poignant lines from A Woman Killed with Kindness provide a sentiment familiar to all those who seek the present moment through the sounds of the past, who hear the voices of yesteryear in the melodies of early modern poetics. Such are the recurrent chords played by Resurgens Theatre Company, a professional original practices troupe that performs rarely produced plays of the English Renaissance. The essays collected in this special issue of Studies in the Literary Imagination developed from their Death and Domesticity Conference at the Shakespeare Tavern Playhouse in Atlanta, Georgia, on September 28 and 29, 2018. The occasion marked Resurgens’ second academic conference on the verse dramas of Shakespeare’s contemporaries,1 and called for submissions that examined some aspect of Renaissance-era domestic tragedies, including topics involving the effect of murder plays on performance and/or early modern print culture. Participants traveled from across the US, as well as the UK, each presenting diverse material that matched Resurgens’ deep-cut ethos admirably.2

Highly popular during the period, domestic dramas have been long since overshadowed by genres more typically associated with the Elizabethan/Jacobean stage, specifically, those derived from categories listed in Shakespeare’s 1623 Folio—comedies, histories, and tragedies. Indeed, the Bard’s status as the premier cultural paradigm for “not [only] an age, but for all time” continues to govern our institutionalized understanding of Renaissance drama (not surprisingly, with a substantial Shakespeare industry working nonstop to shape the content of our conferences, course offerings, journals, monographs, textbooks, etc.). Nevertheless, as these essays illustrate, recent scholarship suggests a move away from narrow bardocentric interests and toward a renewed examination of non-Shakespearean playwrights, playing companies, playing conditions, and types of plays. The busy workshops of early modern poet-practitioners—the numerous playhouses of London (more than just the Globe [End Page v] and Blackfriars, to be sure)—supply the inspiration and innovation necessary for generations of theatre artists to thrive, and a strong argument can be made that the greater dramatic influence belongs to Shakespeare’s rival dramatists, brand name recognition notwithstanding. At the very least, we cannot hope to evaluate the merits of their disparate output (or Shakespeare’s, for that matter) without analyzing the comparative traits and distinguishing aspects of each. And since domestic dramas are not represented in the 1623 Folio (with the arguable exception of Othello), the need to reassess the theatrical prominence of these plays during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, along with future repercussions heretofore obscured, becomes especially clear.

By definition, domestic dramas or bourgeois tragedies depict incidents drawn from everyday life—ordinary people placed in heightened circumstances, usually with tragic results. Private households furnish the setting for a new form of public entertainment, uniquely English in style and scope, that blurs the line between conventional notions of tragedy and its actual representation in period theatres. The Aristotelian/Senecan model that Shakespeare routinely follows (that is, the tragic blueprint requiring the fall of princes and the fate of nations hanging in the balance) hardly reflects the commonplace dynamic present in these slice-of-life plays. In the same spirit of Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus, which rejects the “courts of kings where state is overturned, / Nor in the pomp of proud audacious deeds” (Prologue 4–5), domestic tragedians, like Heywood in A Woman Killed with Kindness, direct their audiences to “Look for no glorious state; our Muse is bent / Upon a barren subject” (Prologue 3–4). This purposeful reduction in dramatic scale not only better conforms to the spatial and dramaturgical particulars of Renaissance playhouses, but also resonates more strongly with playgoers seeking relatable material reimagined from daily affairs—all portrayed with a remarkably un-Shakespearean attentiveness to the smallest detail (Heywood’s stage directions include the entrance of a character “brushing the crumbs from his clothes with a napkin, [as if] newly risen from supper” [8.22]). Predating Arthur Miller’s “Tragedy and the Common Man” by over three centuries...

死亡与家庭生活重新评估文艺复兴时期的家庭戏剧
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 死亡与家庭:重新评估文艺复兴时期的家庭戏剧 布伦特-格里芬(简历)"唤回昨天;/时间能转动他那快速的沙质玻璃杯/解说这些日子,挽回这些时光"(13.48-50):托马斯-海伍德(Thomas Heywood)在《一个被善意杀死的女人》中写下的这段凄美诗句,为所有那些通过过去的声音寻找当下、在早期现代诗学的旋律中聆听昔日声音的人提供了一种熟悉的情感。这就是 Resurgens 剧团反复奏响的和弦,该剧团是一个专业的原创实践剧团,演出英国文艺复兴时期的罕见剧目。本期《文学想象研究》特刊收录的文章是他们于2018年9月28日和29日在佐治亚州亚特兰大市莎士比亚酒馆剧场举行的 "死亡与家庭 "会议的成果。此次会议是Resurgens举办的第二次关于莎士比亚同时代诗剧的学术会议1,会议征集研究文艺复兴时期家庭悲剧某些方面的论文,包括涉及谋杀剧对表演和/或早期现代印刷文化影响的主题。2 家庭悲剧在这一时期非常流行,但早已被更典型的伊丽莎白时代/神户时代舞台的剧种所掩盖,特别是那些来自莎士比亚《1623 年对开本》中所列类别的剧种--喜剧、历史和悲剧。事实上,吟游诗人作为 "不仅是一个时代,而且是所有时代 "的首要文化典范的地位,继续支配着我们对文艺复兴戏剧的制度化理解(这并不奇怪,一个庞大的莎士比亚产业不停地塑造着我们的会议、课程、期刊、专著、教科书等的内容)。然而,正如这些文章所说明的,近期的学术研究表明,我们正在从狭隘的以吟游诗人为中心的兴趣转向对非莎士比亚剧作家、剧团、演出条件和戏剧类型的重新审视。现代早期诗人从业者繁忙的工作坊--伦敦众多的剧场(当然不止环球剧场 [尾页 v]和布莱克弗里尔剧场)--为几代戏剧艺术家的茁壮成长提供了必要的灵感和创新,而且可以提出一个强有力的论点,即尽管莎士比亚的品牌知名度很高,但其戏剧影响力更大的是莎士比亚的对手剧作家。至少,如果不分析他们各自的比较特征和显著特点,我们就无法评价他们(或莎士比亚)不同作品的优劣。由于 1623 年对开本中没有家庭戏剧(《奥赛罗》可以说是个例外),因此,重新评估这些戏剧在 16 世纪和 17 世纪的戏剧中的地位,以及之前被掩盖的未来影响,就变得尤为明显。顾名思义,家庭剧或资产阶级悲剧描写的都是日常生活中的事件--普通人被置于更高的环境中,通常造成悲剧性的结果。私人家庭为一种新的公共娱乐形式提供了背景,这种形式在风格和范围上都独具英国特色,模糊了传统的悲剧概念与悲剧在当时剧院中的实际表现之间的界限。莎士比亚惯常遵循的亚里士多德/塞内加模式(即要求王子陨落、国家命运悬而未决的悲剧蓝图)难以反映这些生活片段剧中的普通动态。马洛(Marlowe)的《浮士德医生》(Doctor Faustus)拒绝 "国家倾覆的国王宫廷,/也拒绝骄傲胆大妄为的华丽场面"(序言 4-5),同样,国内悲剧作家,如《一个被善意杀死的女人》中的海伍德(Heywood),引导他们的观众 "不要寻找光荣的国家;我们的缪斯女神正专注于/一个贫瘠的主题"(序言 3-4)。这种有目的地缩小戏剧规模的做法不仅更符合文艺复兴时期剧场的空间和戏剧特点,也更能引起观众的共鸣,因为他们希望从日常事务中寻找可亲近的素材,而所有这些素材的描绘都对最微小的细节给予了非莎士比亚式的关注(海伍德的舞台指导包括一个角色的登场,"他用餐巾拂去衣服上的碎屑,[仿佛]刚从晚餐中醒来"[8.22])。比阿瑟-米勒的《悲剧与普通人》早三个多世纪......
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