Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress Quickly

Using William Shakespeare’s character Mistress Nell Quickly as an example, this article contends that familiarity with both the literary tradition of alewives and the historical conditions in which said literary tradition brewed aids in revising our interpretation of working-class women on...

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Main Author: Christina Romanelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-01-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/8/1/6
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spelling doaj-691bbb776744465ba6c9d677cdc3b3d52020-11-24T21:13:28ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872019-01-0181610.3390/h8010006h8010006Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress QuicklyChristina Romanelli0Department of English, Meredith College, Raleigh, NC 27607, USAUsing William Shakespeare’s character Mistress Nell Quickly as an example, this article contends that familiarity with both the literary tradition of alewives and the historical conditions in which said literary tradition brewed aids in revising our interpretation of working-class women on the early modern stage. Mistress Quickly, the multi-faceted comic character in three history plays and a city-comedy, resembles closely those women with whom Shakespeare and his contemporaries would have lived and worked in their day-to-day lives. Rather than dismissing her role as minor or merely comic, as previous criticism largely has, scholarship can embrace this character type and her narrative as an example to complicate teleological progressions for women.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/8/1/6Mistress Nell QuicklyAlewivesWilliam Shakespeare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christina Romanelli
spellingShingle Christina Romanelli
Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress Quickly
Humanities
Mistress Nell Quickly
Alewives
William Shakespeare
author_facet Christina Romanelli
author_sort Christina Romanelli
title Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress Quickly
title_short Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress Quickly
title_full Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress Quickly
title_fullStr Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress Quickly
title_full_unstemmed Sour Beer at the Boar’s Head: Salvaging Shakespeare’s Alewife, Mistress Quickly
title_sort sour beer at the boar’s head: salvaging shakespeare’s alewife, mistress quickly
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Using William Shakespeare’s character Mistress Nell Quickly as an example, this article contends that familiarity with both the literary tradition of alewives and the historical conditions in which said literary tradition brewed aids in revising our interpretation of working-class women on the early modern stage. Mistress Quickly, the multi-faceted comic character in three history plays and a city-comedy, resembles closely those women with whom Shakespeare and his contemporaries would have lived and worked in their day-to-day lives. Rather than dismissing her role as minor or merely comic, as previous criticism largely has, scholarship can embrace this character type and her narrative as an example to complicate teleological progressions for women.
topic Mistress Nell Quickly
Alewives
William Shakespeare
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/8/1/6
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