Staging Islam in England: Drama and Culture, 1640-1685
Matthew Birchwood
`This stimulating book will be welcomed by historians, literary scholars, and anyone interested in the history of the English fascination with Islam and the cultural exoticism associated with the East.' PROFESSOR GERALD MACLEAN
Transmitted via the mechanisms of trade and diplomacy and reflected through stage and press, England's cultural encounters with Islam - its peoples, its history, its territories - were fundamental to the ways in which the nation constructed itself through all the tribulations of the seventeenth century; a preoccupation with Islam permeated religious, political, diplomatic and commercial discourses to a degree that has not been recognised by standard accounts of the period.
This book traces engagement with Islam in English political and dramatic life from the inauguration of the Long Parliament until the death of Charles II. It explores the reception and representation of Islam in a wide range of English writings of the period, employing close textual and historical research to trace the development of the 'Turk' from the archetype of cruelty and treachery to the complex and often contradictory figure of mid-century discourse. Throughout, it argues that Islam provided a repository of meanings ripe for transposition to Revolutionary and Restoration England, a process that transfigured the 'East' through the lens of English politics and vice-versa. | |
DETAILS
4 b/w illustrations 216 pages Size: 23.4 x 15.6 cm 13 digit ISBN: 9781843841272
Binding: Hardback First published: 20/Sep/2007 Price: 95.00 USD / 50.00 GBP
Imprint: D. S. Brewer Series: Studies in Renaissance Literature
Subject: English & American Literature
BIC class: CSGD
STATUS: Available
Details updated on 18/11/2008
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Contents
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Introduction
| 1 | |
Cultural Encounters between England and Islam in the Seventeenth Century: A Topography
| 2 | |
Framing `an English Alchoran': The Famous Tragedie of Charles I and the first English translation of the Qur'an
| 3 | |
Orienting the Monarch: Tyranny and Tragedy in Robert Baron's Mirza and John Denham's The Sophy
| 4 | |
Turning to the Turk: Collaboration and Conversion in William Davenant's The Siege of Rhodes
| 5 | |
Toleration, Trade and English Mahometanism in the Aftermath of Restoration
| 6 | |
Plotting the Succession: Exclusion, Oates and the News from Vienna
| 7 | |
Conclusion: `If we ourselves, would from our selves exam'ne us'
| 8 | |
Bibliography
| 9 | |
Index
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Reviews
A very useful study of English drama and its allusions to the Ottoman and Safavid Empires. JOURNAL OF ISLAMIC STUDIES A valuable contribution to the ongoing reassessment of the political and cultural relations between early modern Western Europe and the Islamic Orient. RENAISSANCE QUARTERLY
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