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Journal ArticleDOI

Late Falstaff, the Merry World, and The Merry Wives of Windsor

Harriet Phillips
- 26 Mar 2014 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 2, pp 111-137
TLDR
The Merry Wives of Windsor as discussed by the authors explores contemporary understandings of mirth, suggesting that Falstaff juxtaposes the carnivalesque Sir John with Windsor's confident citizenry to work through nostalgia for "Merry England" in the Elizabethan present.
Abstract
This essay addresses longstanding critical disappointment surrounding Falstaff in The Merry Wives of Windsor, which it argues reflects the play's own concerns with the seductions of memory and the claims of the new. It explores contemporary understandings of mirth, suggesting that Merry Wives juxtaposes the carnivalesque Sir John with Windsor's confident citizenry to work through nostalgia for “Merry England” in the Elizabethan present. At the same time, as an early citizen play The Merry Wives of Windsor explores the aesthetic as well as the political implications of old mirth. Falstaff focuses these concerns, embodying not only past carnival but also theatrical history: in particular, he himself is a survivor of an earlier comic present and is usually seen in the light of this remembered glory. Critical discontent has often focused on the apparent inconsistency between early and late Falstaff, but the article argues against this tradition. Drawing on Theodor Adorno's work on late style, it suggests that...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rabelais and His World.

Journal ArticleDOI

Staging Domesticity: Household Work and English Identity in Early Modern Drama

TL;DR: In the nations' kitchen as discussed by the authors, the erotics of milk and live food, or, ingesting early modern Englishness, were discussed in domestic drama, with a focus on domestic service, taste, and violence.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Birthpangs of Protestant England: Religious and Cultural Change in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries

TL;DR: The Birthpangs of Protestant England: Religious and Cultural Change in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries as mentioned in this paper is a seminal work in the history of the English Reformation.
Journal Article

Untimely Matter in the Time of Shakespeare

TL;DR: In this article, Gil Harris analyzes cultural materials and cultural understandings of matter itself as Latourian actor-networks bearing traces of other times (past, but also fantasized futures), traces that impact their present.

Merry Wives of Windsor

TL;DR: In this paper, the play begins with a young Bertram assuming the title of Count of Rossillion upon the death of his father, and a young Helena is the orphaned daughter of a great doctor, and for years lived in the Rossillion household under the care of Bertram's mother.
References
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Book

Religion and the Decline of Magic

Keith Thomas
TL;DR: The best book is the best book for each of us as mentioned in this paper, and we offer the best here to read, after deciding how your feeling will be, you can enjoy to visit the link and get the book.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rabelais and His World.

Book

The Riverside Shakespeare

TL;DR: The first folio of the First Folio of Shakespeare's plays was published in 1660 as discussed by the authors with the title "The Comedy of Errors" and the first part of the play "Twelfth Night".
Book

Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human

Harold Bloom
TL;DR: In this article, Bloom explains Shakespeare's genius in a radical and provocative re-reading of the plays and expounds a brilliant and far-reaching critical theory: that Shakespeare was, through his dramatic characters, the inventor of human personality as we have come to understand it.
BookDOI

The Cultural Uses of Print in Early Modern France

TL;DR: The first book-length presentation of Roger Chartier's work in English is as mentioned in this paper, which provides a vivid example of the new directions of cultural history in France and reveals the surprising range of ways in which texts and pictures were used by audiences with different levels of literacy.