Thursday, 22 September 2016

Assembling the Texts

Being that I need a somewhat-solid idea of which texts to use for my EPQ, I feel that, given my prior research documented in these places, that I should consolidate the knowledge I've found so that I have one uniform location for  which I can refer to when finding texts. I've divided them into 'Necessary' (Should give me a critical perspective most relevant to my essay), 'Useful' (Texts that provide useful information), and 'Additional Context' (in which the title describes itself). I hope to acquire all of the 'Necessary' texts, and hopefully many of the 'Useful' ones to aid my essay.

Necessary

"Is this winning?": Prince Henry's Death and the Problem of Chivalry in "The Two Noble Kinsmen"
Peter C. Hermen
pp. 1-31
(JSTOR)

The Jailer's Daughter and the Politics of Madwomen's Language
Douglas Bruster
pp. 227-300
(JSTOR)

Emilia's Argument: Friendship and 'Human Title' in "The Two Noble Kinsmen"
Laurie J. Shannon
pp. 657-682
(JSTOR)

"'The Neutral Term'?: Shakespearean Tragicomedy and the Idea of the 'Late Play'
Gordon McMullan
pp. 115-132
(JSTOR)

Early Modern Tragicomedy
Subha Mukherji, Raphael Lyne
'Studies in Renaissance Literature'
Volume 22
DS Brwer, Boydell and Brewer (publishers) 2007
(JSTOR)

'Palamon and Arcite'
John Dryden
(Google Books)

'Distracted Subjects: Madness and Gender in Shakespeare and Early Modern Culture'
Carol Thomas Neely
(Google Books)

https://www.bl.uk/shakespeare/articles/shakespeare-and-friendship
'Shakespeare and Friendship'
Will Tosh
(British Library)


Responses to Tyranny in John Fletcher's Plays
ROBERT Y. TURNER
Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England, Vol. 4 (1989), pp. 123-141
(JSTOR)

Review
Othello by William Shakespeare, E. A. J. Honigmann; The Two Noble Kinsmen by John Fletcher, William Shakespeare, Lois Potter
Review by: Brian Vickers
The Review of English Studies, Vol. 50, No. 197 (Feb., 1999), pp. 79-84
(JSTOR)


Sex Averted or Converted: Sexuality and Tragicomic Genre in the Plays of Fletcher
Verna A. Foster
Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900, Vol. 32, No. 2, Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama (Spring, 1992), pp. 311-322
(JSTOR)


Useful

"For What We Lack,/We Laugh"; Incompletion and "The Two Noble Kinsmen"
Paula S. Berggren
pp. 3-17
(JSTOR)

Shakespeare's Imperiled and Chastening Daughters of Romance
Charles Frey
pp. 125-140
(JSTOR)

"Like a shadow,/ I'll ever dwell": The Jailer's Daughter as Ariandne in "The Two Noble Kinsmen"
Nichole Dewall
pp. 15-26
(JSTOR)

"Seeking the Medieval in Shakespeare: The Order of the Garter and the Topos of Derisive Chivalry"
James N. Ortego II
pp. 80-104
(JSTOR)

Rewritting Perfect Friendship in Chaucer's "A Knight's Tale" and Lydgate's "Fabula Duorum Mercatorum"
Robert Stretter
pp. 234-252
(JSTOR)

The Language of Madwomen in Shakespeare and His Fellow Dramatists
Maurice Charney, Hanna Charney
pp. 451-460
(JSTOR)

Shakespeare and the Ethics of Friendship
John D. Cox
pp. 1-29
(JSTOR)

Shakespeare's Romantic Comedies
Karl F. Thompson
pp. 1079-1093
(JSTOR)

'Shakespeare and the Embodied Heroine: Staging Female Characters in the Late Plays and Early Adaptations
Lori Leigh
(Google Books)

A Concordance to 'The Two Noble Kinsmen' by Shakespeare and Fletcher'
Clarice Crawford
(Google Books)

https://www.bl.uk/shakespeare/articles/daughters-in-shakespeare-dreams-duty-and-defiance
'Daughters in Shakespeare: Dreams, Duty, and Defiance'
Kim Ballard
(British Library Article)

https://www.bl.uk/shakespeare/articles/shakespeare-and-madness
'Shakespeare and Madness'
Will Tosh
(British Library)

Review: Jeffrey Knapp, Shakespeare Only
Shakespeare Only by Jeffrey Knapp
Review by: Joseph Campana
Modern Philology, Vol. 110, No. 4 (May 2013), pp. E248-E251
(JSTOR)

"“Chaucer (of all admired) the story gives”:Shakespeare, Medieval Narrative, and Generic Innovation" (pp. 85-110)
From:Renaissance Papers 2009
Edward Gieskes
Edition: NED - New edition
Boydell & Brewer, Camden House (2010)
(JSTOR)

Review
The Influence of Beaumont and Fletcher on Shakespeare by Ashley H. Thorndike
Review by: Martin W. Sampson
The Journal of Germanic Philology, Vol. 4, No. 2 (1902), pp. 239-247
(JSTOR)

"Something Rich and Strange:Shakespeare’s Approach to Romance 11 July 1982" (pp. 425-439)
From:Northrop Frye's Writings on Shakespeare and the Renaissance
Editors: Troni Y. Grande, Garry Sherbert
Volume: 28
University of Toronto Press (2010)(JSTOR)

"Gentleman-like Tears": Affective Response in Italian Tragicomedy and Shakespeare's Late Plays
Robert Henke
Comparative Literature Studies, Vol. 33, No. 4 (1996), pp. 327-349(JSTOR)

The Absolved Riddle: Sovereign Pleasure and the Baroque Subject in the Tragicomedies of John Fletcher
Herbert Blau
New Literary History, Vol. 17, No. 3, Interpretations (Spring, 1986), pp. 539-554
(JSTOR)


Additional Context

"Shakespeare's Flop: John Waterson and The Two Noble Kinsmen"
Zachary Lesser
pp. 177-196
(JSTOR)

"Chaucer's Influence and Later Allusion"
Annotated Chaucer Bibliography
pp. 135-172
(JSTOR)

Appearance and Reality in Shakespeare's Last Plays
Theodore Spencer
pp. 265-274
(JSTOR)

Review
Shakespeare Co-Author: A Historical Study of Five Collaborative Plays
Brian Vickers
Review by Warren Chernaik
pp. 1030-1031
(JSTOR)

Review
The Weyward Sister: Shakespeare and Feminist Politics
Dympna Callaghan, Lorraine Helms, Jystna Singh
Review by Mark Thornton Burnett
pp. 1046-1047
(JSTOR)

Review
Poor Women in Shakespeare
Fiona McNeill
Review by Rebecca Laroche
pp. 94-95
(JSTOR)

'The Staging of Romance in Late Shakespeare: Text and Theatrical Technique'
Thomas J. Cobb
(Google Books)

Moorish Dancing in "The Two Noble Kinsmen"
SUJATA IYENGAR
Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England, Vol. 20 (2007), pp. 85-107
(JSTOR)

Playing the Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism and Shakespearean Performance
Lorraine Helms
Theatre Journal, Vol. 41, No. 2, Power Plays (May, 1989), pp. 190-200
(JSTOR)

"Comic Myth in Shakespeare" June 1952" (pp. 20-32)
From:Northrop Frye's Writings on Shakespeare and the Renaissance
Editors: Troni Y. Grande, Garry Sherbert
Volume: 28
University of Toronto Press (2010)
(JSTOR)

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