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Theatre and empire
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This book looks at the genesis of British national identity in the reign of King James I and VI. It does this by studying two things: the political language of the King's project to replace England...
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01 October 2020

Theatre and empire explores the genesis of British national identity in the reign of King James VI and I. While devolution is currently decentralising Britain, this book examines how the idea of a 'united kingdom' was created in the first place. It does this by studying two things: the political language of the King's project to replace England, Scotland and Wales with a single kingdom of Great Britain and cultural representations of empire on the public and private stages. The book argues that between 1603 and 1625 a group of playwrights celebrated a new national consciousness in works as diverse as Middleton’s Hengist, King of Kent, Rowley’s The Birth of Merlin and Shakespeare’s Cymbeline. Specifically Jacobean interdisciplinary studies are few compared with Elizabethan and Caroline works, but the book attempts to redress the balance by offering a fresh appraisal of James Stuart’s reign.
Price: £25.00
Pages: 224
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain
Publication Date:
01 October 2020
ISBN: 9781526151728
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
HISTORY / General, History and Archaeology, ART / European, European history: medieval period, middle ages, History of art
Tristan Marshall lectures on sixteenth- and seventeenth-century cultural history at Shakespeare’s Globe
Introduction: James VI and I and the reinvention of Great Britain
1 A Jacobean empire
2 1603-10: 'Britaine is now, Britaine was of yore'
3 1611-13: 'The true Panthaeon of Great Britaine'
4 1614-25: Brute, force and ignorance?
Afterword: 'Neuer a trve Britaine amongst you?'
Index