Posted Suzi Gard's Final Entry to Elizabethan Theatre
Way to go, Team Marlowe. I feel pretty happy with our presentation today. We kept ourselves adequately time-organized and I felt our delivery was lively and engaging. We served up a hot stew of fascinating info on Christopher Marlowe, the...
Posted Suzi Gard Entry 3 to Elizabethan Theatre
1. In terms of this research project, what have you been thinking about this week? This week I have been thinking about the way that artists' work (particularly that of dramatists') can be appropriated and adapted repeatedly throughout history by...
Posted Suzi Gard Blog Entry 2 to Elizabethan Theatre
1. In terms of this research project, what have you been thinking about this week? This week, we have been primarily discussing Marlowe as a voice of resistance to the theo-socio-political norms of the Elizabethan Era. Many of the sources...
Posted Annotated Bibliography: Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe: Censorship and Construction to Elizabethan Theatre
As a precaution, I am reposting this blog out in the open to be sure it is seen. (Sorry if this didn't show up on your grading radar earlier...blogging and tagging confusions on my end!) In his article on William...
Posted Doctor Faustus to Elizabethan Theatre
Full text PDF!! http://www.fullbooks.com/Massacre-at-Paris.html...
Posted Massacre at Paris to Elizabethan Theatre
Here's a link to the full text online: http://www.fullbooks.com/Massacre-at-Paris.html...
Posted Tidbits from "Marlowe's -Massacre at Paris- by Julia Briggs" to Elizabethan Theatre
MLA citation: Briggs, Julia. "Oxford University Press." Oxford University Press. 34.135 (1983): 257-278. Web. 9 Nov. 2012. . +Not well received by critics: "obviously a work of great haste, and gotup forthepurpose ofgratifyingthevulgarfeelingatthatdate against popery: indeed, it has hardly anythingto...