Journal article 1247 views
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage
Literature Compass, Volume: 12, Issue: 7, Pages: 311 - 321
Swansea University Author: Eoin Price
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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/lic3.12243
Abstract
This article examines the politics of privacy and the public drama of the English Renaissance commercial stage. It surveys some recent critical approaches towards the study of privacy and politics including analyses of a supposed early modern public sphere. The article then attends to studies focusi...
Published in: | Literature Compass |
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ISSN: | 1741-4113 |
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Wiley
2015
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa34735 |
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2020-12-16T17:01:15.7530137 v2 34735 2017-07-24 The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage 5eede959b07e4a7b96cab66816cd8a8f 0000-0001-9546-9183 Eoin Price Eoin Price true false 2017-07-24 AELC This article examines the politics of privacy and the public drama of the English Renaissance commercial stage. It surveys some recent critical approaches towards the study of privacy and politics including analyses of a supposed early modern public sphere. The article then attends to studies focusing on Renaissance drama and urges that the study of political privacy be extended beyond domesticity. The essay contends that a wider examination of the corpus of public drama in the English Renaissance is necessary. Shakespeare's plays often take centre stage in critical discussions, but complex concepts like privacy and publicity ought to be explored in reference to the diverse range of plays written for the Renaissance theatres. To illustrate the benefits of exploring the wider Renaissance corpus, the article ends by discussing politics and privacy in the neglected tragedy Soliman and Perseda. Journal Article Literature Compass 12 7 311 321 Wiley 1741-4113 Renaissance drama; privacy; politics; public sphere 31 7 2015 2015-07-31 10.1111/lic3.12243 COLLEGE NANME English Literature COLLEGE CODE AELC Swansea University 2020-12-16T17:01:15.7530137 2017-07-24T22:41:16.2637273 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - English Language, Tesol, Applied Linguistics Eoin Price 0000-0001-9546-9183 1 |
title |
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage |
spellingShingle |
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage Eoin Price |
title_short |
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage |
title_full |
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage |
title_fullStr |
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage |
title_sort |
The Politics of Privacy and the Renaissance Public Stage |
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5eede959b07e4a7b96cab66816cd8a8f |
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5eede959b07e4a7b96cab66816cd8a8f_***_Eoin Price |
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Eoin Price |
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Eoin Price |
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Literature Compass |
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12 |
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311 |
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2015 |
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1741-4113 |
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10.1111/lic3.12243 |
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Wiley |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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description |
This article examines the politics of privacy and the public drama of the English Renaissance commercial stage. It surveys some recent critical approaches towards the study of privacy and politics including analyses of a supposed early modern public sphere. The article then attends to studies focusing on Renaissance drama and urges that the study of political privacy be extended beyond domesticity. The essay contends that a wider examination of the corpus of public drama in the English Renaissance is necessary. Shakespeare's plays often take centre stage in critical discussions, but complex concepts like privacy and publicity ought to be explored in reference to the diverse range of plays written for the Renaissance theatres. To illustrate the benefits of exploring the wider Renaissance corpus, the article ends by discussing politics and privacy in the neglected tragedy Soliman and Perseda. |
published_date |
2015-07-31T03:43:06Z |
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1763752003582820352 |
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11.037603 |