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Elizabethan Drama | The Beginnings of Elizabethan Drama: Revolution and Continuity
In the following essay excerpt, Hunter explores the roots of Elizabethan drama, arguing that “it was the perception of the individual voice as justified” that had the most impact on the fledgling movement.
A standard assumption of literary history is that a group of young men, born of “middle-class” parentage in the 1550s and 1560s and graduating from Oxford or Cambridge between 1575 (Lyly) and 1588 (Nashe) created between them the normal forms of Elizabethan Drama, casting behind them the primitive techniques and attitudes of preceding generations, designated “Tudor Drama,” “Late Medieval Drama,” or whatever other diminishing title distaste elects to supply. I call this assumption “standard” not because I seek to denigrate it (in the recurrent modern mode); there is much...
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