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This volume celebrates Thomas Middleton's legacy as a dramatist, marking the 400th anniversary of Middleton's most contentious work for the public theatres, A Game at Chess (1624). The book offers an assessment of the place of Middleton's drama in culture, criticism, and education today.

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Produktbeschreibung
This volume celebrates Thomas Middleton's legacy as a dramatist, marking the 400th anniversary of Middleton's most contentious work for the public theatres, A Game at Chess (1624). The book offers an assessment of the place of Middleton's drama in culture, criticism, and education today.


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Autorenporträt
William David Green teaches medieval and early modern literature at the University of Warwick. He received his PhD from the University of Birmingham's Shakespeare Institute in 2021, for which he considered Thomas Middleton as an adapter of Shakespeare between 1616 and 1623. This research was generously supported by AHRC Midlands3Cities. His work on Middleton has previously been published in Exchanges and Theatre Notebook, and in the edited collection Kingship, Madness, and Masculinity on the Early Modern Stage (2022). He is a Contributing Editor to the online database Co-Authored Drama in Renaissance England, and is producing a critical edition of The Unnatural Tragedy for The Complete Works of Margaret Cavendish. Anna L. Hegland received her PhD from the University of Kent in 2022. Her research examines the intertwining of rhetoric and action in early modern English theatre during moments of staged violence, and combines textual and practice-based methods to think about enactment and embodiment then and now. Her work has been published in the British Shakespeare Association's Teaching Shakespeare magazine and the edited collection Boundaries of Violence in Early Modern England (2023). She is a lecturer and advisor at Carthage College, Kenosha, Wisconsin, and serves as the social media coordinator for the Shakespeare Association of America. Sam Jermy received his PhD from the University of Leeds in 2022. His doctoral thesis, generously supported by the AHRC's White Rose College of the Arts and Humanities, explored the ways in which masculinities are imagined, staged, articulated, and problematised as intersubjective in Middleton's writings. He has also worked on a public-facing research project with the International Anthony Burgess Foundation on a series of Shakespeare lectures delivered by Burgess in 1973. He maintains an active research interest in the representations of violence, skin, and bruises on the early modern stage.