The first study of English historical plays about the Turks, using works in Greek, Arabic, and Turkish. Drawing on Bakhtin’s concept of the dialogic, Mc Jannet shows that instead of adverse authorial commentary playwrights such as Marlowe and Fulke Greville use dialogue and commentary to enhance the sultan’s stature and mitigate his negative acts.
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction Preliminaries: Historicizing Rage and Representing Historical Speech Sixteenth-century Histories of the Turks: Shocking Speech and Edifying Dicta Marlowe’s Turks History Written by the Enemy: Eastern Sources about the Ottomans Citing the Turkes Own Chronicles: Knolles’s Generall Historie of the Turkes Horrible Acts and Wicked Offenses: Suleyman and Mustapha in Narrative and Drama Epilogue After Knolles: William Seaman’s The Reign of Sultan Orchan
Over de auteur
LINDA Mc JANNET is Professor of English at Bentley College, was educated at Wellesley College and Harvard University. She is the author of
The Voice of Elizabethan Stage Directions: The Evolution of a Theatrical Code (1999).