ABSTRACT

These essays of Sarah Carpenter have been selected to reflect her career’s close focus on the relationship of performance and audience. They are drawn from the last 25 years of her writing, and this has enabled the editors to organise them not chronologically but rather to develop her central theme through a range of genres, including morality plays, the interlude, court entertainments, international political spectacle, and the public ‘performances’ of natural and maintained fools. As a scholar who also has experience of acting and of production, Carpenter is particularly sensitive to the implications of location for creating meaning and generating audience reaction. The essays are focused on a relatively short time-span of 120 years, from the late fifteenth to the turn of the seventeenth century, and thus nuance a period traditionally divided between the late medieval and the early-modern, and between Catholicism and Protestantism. Carpenter shows how the dynamics of theatrical engagement in which the roles of audience and performer are frequently mixed or even reversed offer a more creative route to understanding how the individual and society respond to change. (CS1090)

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

part I|117 pages

Courts

chapter 1|18 pages

Plays and Playcoats

A courtly interlude tradition in Scotland?

chapter 2|15 pages

‘To Thexaltacyon of Noblesse’

A Herald’s account of the marriage of Margaret Tudor and James IV

chapter 3|12 pages

‘Gely Wyth Tharmys of Scotland England’

Word, image and performance at the marriage of James IV and Margaret Tudor

chapter 5|32 pages

Performing Diplomacies

The 1560s court entertainments of Mary Queen of Scots

chapter 6|13 pages

Love and Chastity

Political performance in Scottish, French, and English courts of the 1560s

chapter 7|12 pages

Dramatising Ideology

Monarch, State, and People

part II|101 pages

Audiences

chapter 8|8 pages

New Evidence

Vives and audience-response to biblical drama

chapter 9|13 pages

Verity’s Bible

Books, texts, and reading in Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis

chapter 10|19 pages

Towards a Reformed Theatre

David Lyndsay and Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis

chapter 11|10 pages

The Sixteenth-century Court Audience

Performers and spectators

chapter 12|10 pages

‘My Lady Tongue’

Thomas Tomkis’s Lingua

chapter 13|12 pages

The Politics of Unreason

Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis and the practices of folly

chapter 15|13 pages

The Places of Foolery

Robert Armin and fooling in Edinburgh