The Stage-Play: Drama and Politics Flashcards

1
Q

What was the first highly successful revenge tragedy?

A

Thomas Kydd’s Spanish Tragedy (1590 approx.) was a successful revenge play in the classical style for public audiences

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2
Q

What is the crux of the plot of Thomas Kydd’s Spanish Tragedy?

A

The crux of the plot of Thomas Kydd’s Spanish Tragedy is that justice can’t be achieved at a corrupt court

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3
Q

What is the plot of Thomas Kydd’s Spanish Tragedy?

A

In Thomas Kydd’s Spanish Tragedy, Don Andrea is dishonourably killed and accompanied by Revenge on his quest to avenge himself

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4
Q

How does Francis Bacon characterise revenge?

A

Francis Bacon said that revenge is a ‘wild justice’ that puts the law out of office

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5
Q

Why were revenge tragedies popular in the Elizabethan era?

A

Revenge tragedies were popular in the Elizabethan era because of their rhetorical language and sheer theatricality mirroring contemporaries’ lives

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6
Q

What is a dramatic example of the Tudor perception of their “modern” political culture?

A

William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus (1592) shows the Tudor idea of their “modern” political culture, the enemy’s children are baked in a pie- a macabre reenactment of personal medieval justice

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7
Q

How did the Classical author Seneca influence Elizabethan drama?

A

Seneca’s idea of the revenge crime surpassing the original crime became popular in Elizabethan and Jacobean literature

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8
Q

By when had the Classical author Siasties’ works all been republished?

A

By 1581 Siasties’ works had all been republished, his idea of anger being a temporary madness validated popular Humanist culture

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9
Q

What can be said of Hamlet (1600)?

A

Hamlet’s crisis of conscience elaborates on the idea of anger making you loose all sense

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10
Q

What must be remembered about Hamlet’s regicide?

A

Although Hamlet killed the king, and this might present contemporary issues re: Elizabeth, it was depicted as rightful Christian revenge rather than self-interested treason

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11
Q

What was an issue with Humanism in literature and drama?

A

In literature and drama, there was conflict between Classical and Christian codes

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12
Q

What three types of audiences of Elizabethan drama were there?

A

Legal courts, the Royal court, and the general public were the core audiences of Elizabethan and indeed earlier drama

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13
Q

What made the political culture depicted in dramas acceptable to the English contemporary audiences?

A

The political culture depicted in dramas was acceptable to English contemporary audiences because they were set abroad and this didn’t highlight domestic tensions such as the Wars of the Roses

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14
Q

What can be said about the changes in audience during the Tudor era?

A

During the Tudor era, unprecedented numbers in public theatre were met, and many plots resonated with High Political audiences

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15
Q

What can be said about the multiplicity of plots?

A

There may perhaps have been allusions in plot lines or characters which would have been apparent only o upper class audiences

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16
Q

What was shorthand for corruption during the Tudor era?

A

During the Tudor era, Italian settings were shorthand for corruption during the Tudor era

17
Q

How did the use of macabre references such as to murder change?

A

While the use of macabre began as a serious depiction, it morphed overtime into an artistic device of ‘quaint malice’ rather than moral compulsion