Brawl Ridiculous: Swordfighting in Shakespeare's Plays

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Manchester University Press, 1992 - Drama - 218 pages
Brawl ridiculous offers a new and fascinating perspective on the swordfighting sequences in Shakespeare's plays. Writing with careful attention to Elizabethan performance conditions, Charles Edelman provides a fresh understanding of how Shakespeare's many and diversified battle scenes, duels and single combats would have been presented by his own company. Far from being a bit of violent action added merely to please the 'groundlings', Shakespeare's innovative use of stage combat is shown to be an important means of reinforcing the poetic and dramatic significance of his plays, from the early Histories, to the Romances and the great Tragedies. Written with clarity and a generous measure of humour, Brawl ridiculous combines comprehensive research into English history with an uncommon awareness of the practicalities of stage production, in both Elizabethan times and our own.
 

Contents

CHAPTER ONE Stage combat before Shakespeare
11
THREE Elizabethan neomedievalism
38
SlX King John
90
SEvEN The Henry Vplays
98
ElGHT The Sieges of Troy and Corioles
120
King Lear Macbeth
146
Romeo and Juliet
173
Editions cited
193
Index
214
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