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[PDF] Top 20 Trafficking Women: Interest, Desire, and Early Modern English Drama

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Trafficking Women: Interest, Desire, and Early Modern English Drama

Trafficking Women: Interest, Desire, and Early Modern English Drama

... governing image of Dido’s allure is Aeneas’ description of how “Each word she says will then contain a crown, / And every speech be ended with a kiss” (4.3.53-54), then Arden offers a parallel fantasy of “Sweet Alice ... See full document

227

Fairies in Early Modern English Drama:  Fictionality and Theatrical Landscapes, 1575 1615

Fairies in Early Modern English Drama: Fictionality and Theatrical Landscapes, 1575 1615

... “the desire he had to shewe hus unfained loue, and loyal dutie” 255 Like the earlier entertainments, the major expansion of Elvetham house for the entertainment relies on a transformation of the local landscape, ... See full document

355

When I am in game, I am furious: gaming and sexual conquest in early modern English drama

When I am in game, I am furious: gaming and sexual conquest in early modern English drama

... control the occurance of menstrual blood “threaten[ing] masculine agency and self-control . . . represent[ing] a „feminine‟ inability to regulate the flow of one‟s fluids . . . masculine erotic desire generates ... See full document

315

Pray in Early Modern English drama

Pray in Early Modern English drama

... speech-related Early Modern English texts, including drama, Culpeper and Kytö (2010, 372–397) note social variation in the use of discourse markers in Early Modern English ... See full document

23

The presentation of women in early English drama

The presentation of women in early English drama

... selling women a masochistic idea of love, in which the degree of suffering and self-sacrifice was proportional to the degree of affection, which, encouraged by irresponsible fiction, still persists to this ...A ... See full document

577

Corporeal Returns: Theatrical Embodiment and Spectator Response in Early Modern Drama

Corporeal Returns: Theatrical Embodiment and Spectator Response in Early Modern Drama

... of English anatomical textbooks” (176), or the visually seductive anatomical drawings of Andreas Vesalius, Andreanus Spigelius, Juan Valverde, Jacopo Berengario da Carpi, Charles Estienne, and other famous ... See full document

258

Richard Marsh’s The Beetle (1897): A Late-Victorian Popular Novel

Richard Marsh’s The Beetle (1897): A Late-Victorian Popular Novel

... This paper deals with the publication history and popular appeal of a novel which, when first published in 1897, was characterised by contemporary readers and reviewers as “surprising and ingenious”, “weird”, ... See full document

13

Tagging the Bard:Evaluating the Accuracy of a Modern POS Tagger on Early Modern English Corpora

Tagging the Bard:Evaluating the Accuracy of a Modern POS Tagger on Early Modern English Corpora

... VARD now has a much larger dictionary than that used for previous experiments. The decision was taken to increase the size of the dictionary (currently 26,071 entries) as, previously, many modern words were being ... See full document

14

Redrawing the Map of Early Modern English Catholicism

Redrawing the Map of Early Modern English Catholicism

... sensuality of Catholic culture present in early modern England (p. 27). Marotti looks at Catholic responses to the Protestant charges of idolatry and engages with literary manifestations of the controversy ... See full document

6

Ensemble Named Entity Recognition (NER):Evaluating NER Tools in the Identification of Place Names in Historical Corpora

Ensemble Named Entity Recognition (NER):Evaluating NER Tools in the Identification of Place Names in Historical Corpora

... than English, to various problems derived from the fact that NER systems were created with modern contents in mind, in most cases rely- ing on statistical learning from annotated datasets of modern ... See full document

12

Notebooks, English Virtuosi, and Early Modern Science

Notebooks, English Virtuosi, and Early Modern Science

... many English virtuosi, Yeo places additional emphasis on the influence of Baconianism within the Royal Society, convincingly arguing that it was he who gave note- taking ‘a rationale suited to the empirical ... See full document

5

Protestant Evangelicals and Addiction in Early Modern English

Protestant Evangelicals and Addiction in Early Modern English

... in English universities, and a number of schol- ars became convinced of the need for religious ...However, early reformers faced strong opposition from the Henrician government: the 1530s and 1540s saw a ... See full document

18

Attending to Early Modern Women: Conflict and Concord

Attending to Early Modern Women: Conflict and Concord

... of early modern women, gender relations and power ...of early modern gender studies has been and continues to be fruitful and ...to Early Modern Women: Conflict and ... See full document

5

Salt Tectonism In The Carolina Trough

Salt Tectonism In The Carolina Trough

... Perkins presents charms and witches as something unquestionably evil. Perkins does seem to agree with some of Davies arguments, at least to a certain extent. He would concede that to the practitioners the written charms ... See full document

65

Women and the Performance of Libel in Early Modern Devon

Women and the Performance of Libel in Early Modern Devon

... in early-modern performed libel certainly was to be the target for accusations of moral transgression by men in order to maintain society’s norms and we should not overlook this as a key to understanding ... See full document

12

Women, Work and Sociability in Early Modern London

Women, Work and Sociability in Early Modern London

... underexplored latter half of the period. What impact, if any, did shifts such as the so-called ‘industrious revolution’, or what Hindle has termed a ‘growth of social stability’ have on women’s working lives? This ... See full document

5

Guest Editors' Introduction: (Re)constructed Spaces for Early Modern Drama: Research in Practice

Guest Editors' Introduction: (Re)constructed Spaces for Early Modern Drama: Research in Practice

... 1621, and situating what might be considered “mainstream” commercial performances, as might be found at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, alongside those developed from more esoteric projects. What soon becomes clear, ... See full document

18

The Rule of Women in Early Modern Europe

The Rule of Women in Early Modern Europe

... The next paper discusses one of Isabel’s descendants, Isabel Clara Eugenia, daughter of Philip II of Spain and joint ruler of the Low Countries with her husband Albert in the early seventeenth century. The author, ... See full document

5

Travel and experience in early modern English literature

Travel and experience in early modern English literature

... Chapter 1 of this book first appeared, in altered form, as an article entitled ―Classical and Contemporary Italy in Roger Ascham‘s The Scholemaster (1570)‖ (Renaissance Studies 16: 2 (2002): 202–16), and I am grateful to ... See full document

10

Languages of theatre shaped by women

Languages of theatre shaped by women

... of modern western drama can be traced to the Quem quaeritis trope of the Easter Mass, which used four priests and the altar to re-enact mimetically – albeit in rudimentary form – the encounter between the ... See full document

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