Research Catalog

Comedy, youth, manhood in early modern England / Ira Clark.

Title
Comedy, youth, manhood in early modern England / Ira Clark.
Author
Clark, Ira.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library PR658.Y6 C58 2003Off-site

Details

Description
170 p.; 25 cm.
Summary
  • "Comedy, Youth, Manhood in Early Modern England examines from a social and historical perspective Renaissance comic stage presentations of the conflicting imperatives young men faced in trying to win manhood.
  • "Early Stuart presentations of dueling epitomize the conflicting moral and sociopolitical allures and demands that characterize the problems of youth striving to prove men in early modern England. Many presentations subordinated the violence of the sword to the discipline of the pen obedient to the kingdom. Such claimed that service to the commonweal constituted a new, temperate proof of genteel manhood; but this replaced only inadequately traditional proofs of martial courage.
  • Its chapters focus on the importance of marriage as entry to manhood, on satires of academies of conduct with eulogies of plays as models of conduct, on the plight of younger brothers forced to seek support because the family's resources were willed to the elder, on their fantasy of gaining manhood by marrying a wealthy, sexy widow, and on their real dilemma over choosing whether or not to duel when both attractions and dissuasions remained entangled and conflicted.
  • Meanwhile dueling's advocates appealed to macho martial attractions, even as they had to acknowledge the waste and mayhem. Both stances came replete with ambivalent means of demonstrating aggressive courage simultaneously with temperate rationality, since both of these contradictory virtues were presumed to demonstrate early English manhood."--BOOK JACKET.
  • The book reads Tudor-Stuart comedies in order to illuminate the problems and promises of achieving manhood because comedies permit public scrutiny of what might seem inhibitingly painful or irresoluble and of nuances that might go unregistered by the data and contemporary documents employed in social and gender histories.".
Subject
  • English drama (Comedy) > History and criticism
  • English drama > 17th century > History and criticism
  • English drama > Early modern and Elizabethan, 1500-1600 > History and criticism
  • Masculinity in literature
  • Maturation (Psychology) in literature
  • Men in literature
  • Young men in literature
  • Youth in literature
ISBN
0874138280 (alk. paper)
LCCN
2002151560
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries