

An edition of The roaring firle (1611)
as it hath lately beene acted on the Fortune-stage by the Prince His Players
By Thomas Middleton,Thomas Dekker
Publish Date
1611
Publisher
[By Nicholas Okes] for Thomas Archer, and are to be sold at his shop in Popes Head-Pallace, neere the Royall Exchange
Language
eng
Pages
100
Description:
Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker's comic triumph is as relevant today as it was when first performed in 1611. With its helpful annotations, historical documents on cross-dressing and on the colorful Mary Frith (the real-life model for Cutpurse); and wealth of scholarly interpretations, this Norton Critical Edition brings The Roaring Girl to life for today's readers. The text of The Roaring Girl is based on the text from English Renaissance Drama: A Norton Anthology It is accompanied by generous explanatory annotations, five illustrations, and a detailed introduction. Thirteen critical essays chart the development of scholarly interest in The Roaring Girl, from the first half of the twentieth century, when the play received only passing reference, through the work on city comedy in the 1970's and 1980's, to the explosion of analyses through the late 1980's and 1990's when the play became a major focus for early modern gender studies. The more recent critical essays move beyond a strict focus on gender and cross-dressing to explore The Roaring Girl's depiction of other aspects of early modern London, including consumer culture and the contemporary fascination with the language of the criminal underworld. --Book Jacket.
subjects: Drama, Frith, Mary, 1584?-1659, British and irish drama (dramatic works by one author), Fiction, general, Criticism and interpretation, English drama, History and criticism, English drama (Comedy), Gender identity, Transvestism, Social life and customs, Cross-dressing
People: Moll Cutpurse (1584?-1659), Moll Cutpurse