Patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80

This thesis is working on the activity of those acting companies wearing royal, noble, or local livery in the pre-Shakespeare period. The work contains two major parts. The first section, scrutinising the patronage of players, tries to rebuild the role of players in the patronage system. Who were th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lee, Juo-Yung
Published: University of Edinburgh 2000
Subjects:
942
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653775
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-653775
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6537752017-08-30T03:12:35ZPatronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80Lee, Juo-Yung2000This thesis is working on the activity of those acting companies wearing royal, noble, or local livery in the pre-Shakespeare period. The work contains two major parts. The first section, scrutinising the patronage of players, tries to rebuild the role of players in the patronage system. Who were the patrons? How did patronage pass from one hand to another? What was the relationship between a livery company and its patron? Can a company’s travelling pattern reflect the sphere of influence of its master? These are the questions to be answered. Propaganda is the major concern of the second part of the thesis. In this section, the propagandist function of players is further investigated. The activity of major companies, including the Bale/Cromwell’s, Suffolk’s, Bedford’s, and Leicester’s, is thoroughly surveyed. The thesis concludes with a discussion of the acting business in the last two decades of the sixteenth century, examining whether this was the final phase of itinerant livery players and how these players accommodated themselves in the London Stage. Patronage and propaganda have for long been the concerns of both literary critics and historians. But few studies have ever tried to combined the achievement of the two disciplines into one study. This thesis is an attempt to put the livery acting business back into its historical context, showing that the fluctuations of the profession in the sixteenth century was a product of its particular time. This thesis is also the first work that is able to provide statistical evidence to verify these long-debated issues.942University of Edinburghhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653775http://hdl.handle.net/1842/22404Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 942
spellingShingle 942
Lee, Juo-Yung
Patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80
description This thesis is working on the activity of those acting companies wearing royal, noble, or local livery in the pre-Shakespeare period. The work contains two major parts. The first section, scrutinising the patronage of players, tries to rebuild the role of players in the patronage system. Who were the patrons? How did patronage pass from one hand to another? What was the relationship between a livery company and its patron? Can a company’s travelling pattern reflect the sphere of influence of its master? These are the questions to be answered. Propaganda is the major concern of the second part of the thesis. In this section, the propagandist function of players is further investigated. The activity of major companies, including the Bale/Cromwell’s, Suffolk’s, Bedford’s, and Leicester’s, is thoroughly surveyed. The thesis concludes with a discussion of the acting business in the last two decades of the sixteenth century, examining whether this was the final phase of itinerant livery players and how these players accommodated themselves in the London Stage. Patronage and propaganda have for long been the concerns of both literary critics and historians. But few studies have ever tried to combined the achievement of the two disciplines into one study. This thesis is an attempt to put the livery acting business back into its historical context, showing that the fluctuations of the profession in the sixteenth century was a product of its particular time. This thesis is also the first work that is able to provide statistical evidence to verify these long-debated issues.
author Lee, Juo-Yung
author_facet Lee, Juo-Yung
author_sort Lee, Juo-Yung
title Patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80
title_short Patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80
title_full Patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80
title_fullStr Patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80
title_full_unstemmed Patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in Tudor England, 1530-80
title_sort patronage of livery players and their propagandist function in tudor england, 1530-80
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2000
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653775
work_keys_str_mv AT leejuoyung patronageofliveryplayersandtheirpropagandistfunctionintudorengland153080
_version_ 1718520454311837696