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Literary Criticism Shakespeare

Unfixable Forms

Disability, Performance, and the Early Modern English Theater

by (author) Katherine Schaap Williams

Publisher
Cornell University Press
Initial publish date
Jun 2021
Category
Shakespeare, English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, 16th Century
Recommended Age
18
Recommended Grade
12
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781501753503
    Publish Date
    Jun 2021
    List Price
    $80.95

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Description

Unfixable Forms explores how theatrical form remakes?and is in turn remade by?early modern disability. Figures described as "deformed," "lame," "crippled," "ugly," "sick," and "monstrous" crowd the stage in English drama of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In each case, such a description distills cultural expectations about how a body should look and what a body should do?yet, crucially, demands the actor's embodied performance. In the early modern theater, concepts of disability collide with the deforming, vulnerable body of the actor. Reading dramatic texts alongside a diverse array of sources, ranging from physic manuals to philosophical essays to monster pamphlets, Katherine Schaap Williams excavates an archive of formal innovation to argue that disability is at the heart of the early modern theater's exploration of what it means to put the body of an actor on the stage.

Offering new interpretations of canonical works by William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Middleton, and William Rowley, and close readings of little-known plays such as The Fair Maid of the Exchange and A Larum For London, Williams demonstrates how disability cuts across foundational distinctions between nature and art, form and matter, and being and seeming. Situated at the intersections of early modern drama, disability studies, and performance theory, Unfixable Forms locates disability on the early modern stage as both a product of cultural constraints and a spark for performance's unsettling demands and electrifying eventfulness.

About the author

Awards

  • Commended, Association for Theatre in Higher Education Outstanding Book Award (ATHE)
  • Runner-up, David Bevington Award for Best New Book in Early Drama Studies
  • Short-listed, Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History

Contributor Notes

Katherine Schaap Williams is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Toronto.