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Endorsements
Playing politics explores the formative 1670-71 season in the Restoration playhouses, analysing the new and developing creative and ideological impulses that emerged in the season's works, both canonical and neglected. This richly contextualised study traces the crystallisation of ideas and innovations that would dominate political and literary discourse over the next decade. As concerns about royal (and dramatic) succession became increasingly pressing, the political influence of the royal mistresses preoccupied dramatists and political commentators alike, and the contentious forces of the libertine mythology became apparent in the playhouses and in the streets and parks of London, drama reached a turning point. Responding to a fractured political landscape, the theatres experimented with novelty, spectacle, and a range of generically and tonally uncertain works. In this critical season the first professional female playwright emerged alongside an influx of other new dramatic voices that contributed to attempts to forge new dramatic directions. Challinor's interdisciplinary approach explores these tensions onstage and within the playhouses, but it also considers their presence in the preliminaries to the printed drama, in contemporary manuscript satires, in parliamentary debates, newsletters, sermons, pamphlets, letters, and diaries. While recognising the patchy nature of the period's theatrical records, this book uses the available evidence of the season's extant new and revived drama to examine the circumstances of the plays' creation, production, performance, and reception. The scope of Playing politics ultimately reaches beyond one year, tracking the latent and developing dramatic trends and political arguments that would come to define the 1670s.
Reviews
Playing politics explores the formative 1670-71 season in the Restoration playhouses, analysing the new and developing creative and ideological impulses that emerged in the season's works, both canonical and neglected. This richly contextualised study traces the crystallisation of ideas and innovations that would dominate political and literary discourse over the next decade. As concerns about royal (and dramatic) succession became increasingly pressing, the political influence of the royal mistresses preoccupied dramatists and political commentators alike, and the contentious forces of the libertine mythology became apparent in the playhouses and in the streets and parks of London, drama reached a turning point. Responding to a fractured political landscape, the theatres experimented with novelty, spectacle, and a range of generically and tonally uncertain works. In this critical season the first professional female playwright emerged alongside an influx of other new dramatic voices that contributed to attempts to forge new dramatic directions. Challinor's interdisciplinary approach explores these tensions onstage and within the playhouses, but it also considers their presence in the preliminaries to the printed drama, in contemporary manuscript satires, in parliamentary debates, newsletters, sermons, pamphlets, letters, and diaries. While recognising the patchy nature of the period's theatrical records, this book uses the available evidence of the season's extant new and revived drama to examine the circumstances of the plays' creation, production, performance, and reception. The scope of Playing politics ultimately reaches beyond one year, tracking the latent and developing dramatic trends and political arguments that would come to define the 1670s.
Manchester University Press
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View all titlesBibliographic Information
- Publisher Manchester University Press
- Publication Date March 2026
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781526181114 / 1526181118
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPrint PDF
- Pages272
- ReadershipGeneral/trade
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234 X 156 mm
- Biblio NotesDerived from Proprietary 6280
- Reference Code16697
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