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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jonathan WalkerPublisher: Northwestern University Press Imprint: Northwestern University Press Weight: 0.480kg ISBN: 9780810135024ISBN 10: 0810135027 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 30 May 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAdmirably researched and knowledgeably written, <i>Site Unscene </i>makes a thorough and convincing argument. Although written with scholars of Renaissance drama in mind, this intriguing topic has much wider appeal. --William Gruber, author of <i>Comic Theaters: Studies in Performance and Audience Response </i>and <i>Missing Persons: Essays on Character and Characterization in Modern Drama</i> This is an astute and thrillingly interdisciplinary study . . . Walker develops a provocative reassessment of the sites of critical interest in Renaissance drama, and he is deeply invested in this drama's interpretive challenge to its audiences--a challenge that originates in the visual, generic, interpretive, and epistemological perspective created by the offstage. --Renaissance Quarterly Site Unscene is a welcome contribution to the study of narrative in drama. It engages convincingly with ancient and contemporary theories, while offering a good attempt at bridging the gap among literary criticism, performance studies, and theatre history, as well as textual studies, architecture, and visual culture. --Theatre Journal Comprehensive in research and deft in exposition, [Site Unscene] corrals theoretical distinctions between drama and narrative, onstage storytelling, theatre architecture and non-dialogic text in printed drama in order to trace the symbiotic opposition of onstage and offstage elements in the production of Renaissance drama. --Theatre Research International Admirably researched and knowledgeably written, Site Unscene makes a thorough and convincing argument. Although written with scholars of Renaissance drama in mind, this intriguing topic has much wider appeal. --William Gruber, author of Comic Theaters: Studies in Performance and Audience Response and Missing Persons: Essays on Character and Characterization in Modern Drama Walker's book makes an important contribution to the study of space in early modern English drama. Other scholars have focused on the material conditions of performance, on questions of form, or on the construction of dramatic space, but Walker endeavors to show how these elements interacted with one another to produce the complex spatiality of early modern English drama. Indeed, part of the power of his argument is to demonstrate the divergence between the theory and the practice of drama--a useful corrective to those critics who assume that early modern arguments about what drama should do can function simultaneously as accounts of what drama in fact does. --Andrew Bozio, Theatre Survey Both the theoretical and the practical are operating at once and the interplay of the two is what we need to better understand the early modern dramatic scene. Walker's achievement is to open up that gap between the two and remind the reader that this is the space for interpretation. --Emily Ruth Isaacson, Early Theatre It is not possible [in this review] to do justice to Walker's sophisticated, nuanced, and far-reaching research. Through a detailed exploration of the offstage--as narrative and epistemological construction, as literal, architectural space, and as a key structuring principle of dramatic texts--he has drawn attention to an important and flexible category of early modern dramatic space. The book's multidisciplinary method captures a range of seemingly disparate elements that, under the mutable category of the 'offstage' become interconnected in intriguing, beguiling, and stimulating ways. --Renaissance Studies Admirably researched and knowledgeably written, <i>The Offstage in English Renaissance Drama</i> makes a thorough and convincing argument. Although written with scholars of Renaissance drama in mind, this intriguing topic has much wider appeal. William Gruber, author of <i>Comic Theaters: Studies in Performance and Audience Response </i>and <i>Missing Persons: Essays on Character and Characterization in Modern Drama</i> Author InformationJonathan Walker is an associate professor of English at Portland State University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |