ABSTRACT

With its many rites of initiation (religious, educational, professional or sexual), Elizabethan and Jacobean education emphasized both imitation and discovery in a struggle to bring population to a minimal literacy, while more demanding techniques were being developed for the cultural elite. The Circulation of Knowledge in Early Modern English Literature examines the question of transmission and of the educational procedures in16th- and 17th-century England by emphasizing deviant practices that questioned, reassessed or even challenged pre-established cultural norms and traditions. This volume thus alternates theoretical analyses with more specific readings in order to investigate the multiple ways in which ideas then circulated. It also addresses the ways in which the dominant cultural forms of the literature and drama of Shakespeare’s age were being subverted. In this regard, its various contributors analyze how the interrelated processes of initiation, transmission and transgression operated at the core of early modern English culture, and how Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare and Thomas Middleton, or lesser known poets and playwrights such as Thomas Howell, Thomas Edwards and George Villiers, managed to appropriate these cultural processes in their works.

chapter |14 pages

General Introduction

part I|42 pages

Theories and Philosophies of Transmission

chapter 1|14 pages

Ship of Fools

Foucault and the Shakespeareans

part III|54 pages

Political and Spiritual Issues

chapter 8|16 pages

Marlowe's Political Balancing Act

Religion and translatio imperii in Doctor Faustus (B)

chapter 11|14 pages

Limited Being

Revising Hamlet in The Revenger's Tragedy

part IV|68 pages

Transgressions of Gender and Genre

chapter 12|14 pages

Cephalus and Procris

The Transmission of a Myth in Early Modern England

chapter 15|12 pages

‘Transversing' and ‘Transprosing'

The Case of George Villiers's The Rehearsal (1671)

chapter 16|16 pages

Romeo and Juliet in Brazil

Grupo Galpão's Romeu e Julieta

chapter |4 pages

Afterword

‘Love's Transgression’