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Inventions of the Skin: The Painted Body in Early English Drama
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Barnes and Noble
Inventions of the Skin: The Painted Body in Early English Drama
Current price: $120.00
Barnes and Noble
Inventions of the Skin: The Painted Body in Early English Drama
Current price: $120.00
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Examines the painted body of the actor on the early modern stage
Inventions of the Skin
illuminates a history of the stage technology of paint that extends backward to the 1460s York cycle and forward to the 1630s. Organized as a series of studies, the four chapters of this book examine goldface and divinity in York's Corpus Christi play, with special attention to the pageant representing
The Transfiguration of Christ
; bloodiness in Elizabethan and Jacobean drama, specifically blood's unexpected role as a device for disguise in plays such as
Look About You
(anon.) and Shakespeare's
Coriolanus
; racial masquerade within seventeenth-century court performances and popular plays, from Ben Jonson's
Masque of Blackness
to William Berkeley's
The Lost Lady
; and finally whiteface, death, and "stoniness" in Thomas Middleton's
The Second Maiden’s Tragedy
and Shakespeare's
The Winter’s Tale.
Recovering a crucial grammar of theatrical representation, this book argues that the onstage embodiment of characters—not just the words written for them to speak—forms an important and overlooked aspect of stage representation.