The Palgrave Handbook of Shakespeare's Queens edited by Kavita Mudan Finn, Valerie Schutte.

Of Shakespeare’s thirty-seven plays, fifteen include queens. This collection gives these characters their due as powerful early modern women and agents of change, bringing together new perspectives from scholars of literature, history, theater, and the fine arts. Essays span Shakespeare’s career and...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Finn, Kavita Mudan (Editor), Schutte, Valerie (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.
Edition:1st ed. 2018.
Series:Queenship and Power
Springer eBook Collection.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click to view e-book
Holy Cross Note:Loaded electronically.
Electronic access restricted to members of the Holy Cross Community.
Table of Contents:
  • 1. Introduction
  • I. General Studies
  • 2. Stagecraft and Statecraft: Queenship and Theatricality on the Shakespearean Stage
  • 3. Shakespeare's Queens and Collective Forces: Facing Aristocracy, Dealing with Crowds
  • II. Queenship & Sovereignty
  • 4. "I trust I may not trust thee": Queens and Royal Women's Visions of the World in King John
  • 5. Cordelia, Foreign Queenship, and the Commonweal
  • 6. "Tremble at patience": Constant Queens and Female Solidarity in The Two Noble Kinsmen and The Winter's Tale
  • III. Queenship & Motherhood
  • 7. "...to beare the name of a queene": Eleanor, Duchess of Gloucester, and Lady Macbeth: Queens and Motherhood
  • 8. Womb Rhetoric: The Martial Maternity of Volumnia, Tamora, and Elizabeth I
  • 9. "Good queen, my lord, good queen": Royal Mothers in Shakespeare's Plays
  • IV. Queenship & Rhetoric
  • 10. Margaret of Anjou and the Rhetoric of Sovereign Violence
  • 11. "I can no longer hold me patient!": Margaret, Anger, and Political Voice in Richard III
  • 12. Shakespeare's Cleopatra as Metatheatrical Monarch
  • V. Absent/Missing Queens
  • 13. "Nothing Hath Begot My Something Grief": Invisible Queenship in Shakespeare's Second Tetralogy
  • 14. The Queen's Two Bodies in The Winter's Tale
  • 15. The Political Aesthetics of Anne Boleyn's Queenship in Henry VIII, or All is True
  • 16. The Fortification and Containment of Queen Elizabeth I's Rhetoric and Performance in Shakespeare and Fletcher's Henry VIII
  • VI. Staging Queens & Contemporary Politics
  • 17. The Princess' Political Mission in Love Labour's Lost: The Embassy to get Aquitaine and "all that is" Navarre's
  • 18. Katherine of Aragon, Protestant Purity, and the Anxieties of Cultural Mixing in Shakespeare and Fletcher’s King Henry VIII
  • 19. “The Ambition in my Love”: The Theatre of Courtly Conduct in All’s Well That Ends Well
  • VII. Queenship & Intertextuality
  • 20. As Wise as She is Beautiful: Reconciling Shakespeare’s Fairy Queen and Spenser’s Faerie Queene
  • 21. The Princess of France: Difference and Dif(fé)rance in Love’s Labour’s Lost
  • 22. “A gap in nature”: Re-writing Cleopatra Through Antony and Cleopatra’s Cosmology
  • 23. En un infierno los dos: Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn in Shakespeare & Fletcher’s Henry VIII and Calderón’s La cisma de Inglaterra
  • VIII. Performing Queenship
  • 24. Margaret of Anjou: Shakespeare's Adapted Heroine
  • 25. The Bard, the Bride, and the Muse Bemused: Katherine de Valois on Film in Shakespeare’s Henry V
  • 26. The “squeaking Cleopatra boy”: Performance of the Queen’s Two Bodies on the Early Modern Stage.