Wooden Os: Shakespeare’s Theatres and England’s Trees

Awards:   Short-listed for Society of Theatre Research Theatre Book Prize 2014 (UK)
Author:   Vin Nardizzi
Publisher:   University of Toronto Press
ISBN:  

9781487522612


Pages:   277
Publication Date:   08 December 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Wooden Os: Shakespeare’s Theatres and England’s Trees


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Awards

  • Short-listed for Society of Theatre Research Theatre Book Prize 2014 (UK)

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Vin Nardizzi
Publisher:   University of Toronto Press
Imprint:   University of Toronto Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.340kg
ISBN:  

9781487522612


ISBN 10:   1487522614
Pages:   277
Publication Date:   08 December 2017
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Illustrations Acknowledgements Prologue: Evergreen Fantasies: Utopia’s Trees and Early Modern Theatre Introduction: Wood, Timber, and Theatre in Early Modern England Chapter 1: “Vanish the tree”: Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay at the Rose Chapter 2: “Come, will this wood take fire?” The Merry Wives of Windsor in Shakespeare’s Theatres Chapter 3: “Down with these branches and these loathsome boughs / Of this unfortunate and fatal pine”: The Composite Spanish Tragedy at the Fortune Chapter 4: “There’s wood enough within”: The Tempest’s Logs and The Resources of Shakespeare’s Globe Epilogue: The Afterlives of the Globe Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

'Fascinating book... Wooden Os offers important insights into an unexplored topic, with some good literary analysis along the way. At his best, we might say, Nardizzi helps us to see both the woods and the trees.' -- Andrew Murphy * English Studies in Canada vol 41:03:2015 * 'The first thing to strike the reader of this book is its awkwardly puzzling title, then the genuine pleasure, the intellectual curiosity and the precise reasoning and style with which it has been written and researched. Completely original in its outcome, this study is well rooted in recent and less recent scholarship about the English Renaissance and Shakespeare.' -- Caterina Salabe * Memoria di Shakespeare: A Journal of Shakespeare Studies 2015 * 'Both factually grounded and ambitiously speculative, with solid roots in established scholarship but offering new branches, Wooden Os proves itself a worthy contribution to ongoing efforts to recover the environmental history of early modern England through readings of literature.' -- Robert N. Watson * Renaissance Quarterly vol 68:01:2015 * 'Intriguing and innovative book... This is inventive work that draws on ecocriticism, object studies, and theatre history in the service of original readings of plays by Shakespeare, Thomas Kyd, and Robert Greens.' -- Julia Reinhard Lupton * Studies in English Literature vol 54:02:2014 * 'Fascinating, detailed, and rigorous historical work, Nardizzi's term eco-materialism promises to be a useful and necessary tool for advancing thought in eco-criticism, object oriented environs studies, and early modern historical and literary studies.' -- Mark Kaethler * Sixteenth Century Journal vol 65:02:2014 * Wooden Os adds to the long-engrained critical history of early modern drama by magnifying the physical substance that most studies overlook: the woody matter of the stage itself. Investigating the 'cultural pervasiveness of the material link between theatres and woodlands' Nardizzi deftly employs an ecocritical methodology that examines (and frequently challenges) implied divisions between nature (trees) and culture (wood products). -- Lowell Duckert * Theatre Journal, Vol. 66:03:2014 *


'Intriguing and innovative book... This is inventive work that draws on ecocriticism, object studies, and theatre history in the service of original readings of plays by Shakespeare, Thomas Kyd, and Robert Greens.' - Julia Reinhard Lupton - Studies in English Literature vol 54:02:2014 'Fascinating, detailed, and rigorous historical work, Nardizzi's term eco-materialism promises to be a useful and necessary tool for advancing thought in eco-criticism, object oriented environs studies, and early modern historical and literary studies.' - Mark Kaethler - Sixteenth Century Journal vol 65:02:2014 'Both factually grounded and ambitiously speculative, with solid roots in established scholarship but offering new branches, Wooden Os proves itself a worthy contribution to ongoing efforts to recover the environmental history of early modern England through readings of literature.' - Robert N. Watson - Renaissance Quarterly vol 68:01:2015 'The first thing to strike the reader of this book is its awkwardly puzzling title, then the genuine pleasure, the intellectual curiosity and the precise reasoning and style with which it has been written and researched. Completely original in its outcome, this study is well rooted in recent and less recent scholarship about the English Renaissance and Shakespeare.' - Caterina Salab? - Memoria di Shakespeare: A Journal of Shakespeare Studies 2015 'Fascinating book... Wooden Os offers important insights into an unexplored topic, with some good literary analysis along the way. At his best, we might say, Nardizzi helps us to see both the woods and the trees.' - Andrew Murphy - English Studies in Canada vol 41:03:2015


`Fascinating book... Wooden Os offers important insights into an unexplored topic, with some good literary analysis along the way. At his best, we might say, Nardizzi helps us to see both the woods and the trees.' -- Andrew Murphy * English Studies in Canada vol 41:03:2015 * `The first thing to strike the reader of this book is its awkwardly puzzling title, then the genuine pleasure, the intellectual curiosity and the precise reasoning and style with which it has been written and researched. Completely original in its outcome, this study is well rooted in recent and less recent scholarship about the English Renaissance and Shakespeare.' -- Caterina Salab� * Memoria di Shakespeare: A Journal of Shakespeare Studies 2015 * `Both factually grounded and ambitiously speculative, with solid roots in established scholarship but offering new branches, Wooden Os proves itself a worthy contribution to ongoing efforts to recover the environmental history of early modern England through readings of literature.' -- Robert N. Watson * Renaissance Quarterly vol 68:01:2015 * `Intriguing and innovative book... This is inventive work that draws on ecocriticism, object studies, and theatre history in the service of original readings of plays by Shakespeare, Thomas Kyd, and Robert Greens.' -- Julia Reinhard Lupton * Studies in English Literature vol 54:02:2014 * `Fascinating, detailed, and rigorous historical work, Nardizzi's term eco-materialism promises to be a useful and necessary tool for advancing thought in eco-criticism, object oriented environs studies, and early modern historical and literary studies.' -- Mark Kaethler * Sixteenth Century Journal vol 65:02:2014 *


'Intriguing and innovative book... This is inventive work that draws on ecocriticism, object studies, and theatre history in the service of original readings of plays by Shakespeare, Thomas Kyd, and Robert Greens.' - Julia Reinhard Lupton - Studies in English Literature vol 54:02:2014 'Fascinating, detailed, and rigorous historical work, Nardizzi's term eco-materialism promises to be a useful and necessary tool for advancing thought in eco-criticism, object oriented environs studies, and early modern historical and literary studies.' - Mark Kaethler - Sixteenth Century Journal vol 65:02:2014 Wooden Os adds to the long-engrained critical history of early modern drama by magnifying the physical substance that most studies overlook: the woody matter of the stage itself. Investigating the 'cultural pervasiveness of the material link between theatres and woodlands' Nardizzi deftly employs an ecocritical methodology that examines (and frequently challenges) implied divisions between nature (trees) and culture (wood products). - Lowell Duckert - Theatre Journal, Vol. 66:03:2014 'Both factually grounded and ambitiously speculative, with solid roots in established scholarship but offering new branches, Wooden Os proves itself a worthy contribution to ongoing efforts to recover the environmental history of early modern England through readings of literature.' - Robert N. Watson - Renaissance Quarterly vol 68:01:2015 'The first thing to strike the reader of this book is its awkwardly puzzling title, then the genuine pleasure, the intellectual curiosity and the precise reasoning and style with which it has been written and researched. Completely original in its outcome, this study is well rooted in recent and less recent scholarship about the English Renaissance and Shakespeare.' - Caterina Salab? - Memoria di Shakespeare: A Journal of Shakespeare Studies 2015 'Fascinating book... Wooden Os offers important insights into an unexplored topic, with some good literary analysis along the way. At his best, we might say, Nardizzi helps us to see both the woods and the trees.' - Andrew Murphy - English Studies in Canada vol 41:03:2015


Author Information

Vin Nardizzi is a professor in the Department of English Language and Literatures at the University of British Columbia.

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