Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Afterword: Documenting Performance across the Medieval/Modern Frontier
View through CrossRef
As an afterword to the special issue of JMEMS “Performance beyond Drama,” this essay reflects on the complex ways that premodern performances and their embodied actors are captured in, mediated by, or dependent on the texts that we use to study them, and on the special importance of examining this process across a temporal framework—the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries—that challenges the periodizing schema of modernity. In particular, three major systemic changes impacted European performance practices and their documentation during this era: the more widespread availability and manufacture of paper, which made writing easier and reading cheaper, coupled with the introduction of print technology after 1455; the upheaval of the Protestant Reformation and its Catholic counterpart, and the bloody aftermath of religious wars, persecutions, and witch hunts that (re)shaped performance traditions; and the commodification and policing of entertainment through enclosure and regulation. Taken together, this special issue's contributions reveal fascinating convergences and continuities in performance across the medieval/modern frontier, while also showing how some medieval practices were made to conform with postmedieval political and religious projects, thereby obscuring or blurring the evidence for those earlier practices.
Title: Afterword: Documenting Performance across the Medieval/Modern Frontier
Description:
As an afterword to the special issue of JMEMS “Performance beyond Drama,” this essay reflects on the complex ways that premodern performances and their embodied actors are captured in, mediated by, or dependent on the texts that we use to study them, and on the special importance of examining this process across a temporal framework—the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries—that challenges the periodizing schema of modernity.
In particular, three major systemic changes impacted European performance practices and their documentation during this era: the more widespread availability and manufacture of paper, which made writing easier and reading cheaper, coupled with the introduction of print technology after 1455; the upheaval of the Protestant Reformation and its Catholic counterpart, and the bloody aftermath of religious wars, persecutions, and witch hunts that (re)shaped performance traditions; and the commodification and policing of entertainment through enclosure and regulation.
Taken together, this special issue's contributions reveal fascinating convergences and continuities in performance across the medieval/modern frontier, while also showing how some medieval practices were made to conform with postmedieval political and religious projects, thereby obscuring or blurring the evidence for those earlier practices.
Related Results
Borderlands in Medieval Britain and Ireland
Borderlands in Medieval Britain and Ireland
Borderlands in medieval Britain and Ireland took many forms. Borders were sometimes physical boundaries within the landscape, whether natural features such as rivers or mountains, ...
Is Rural Kansas Prepared? An Assessment of Resources Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic
Is Rural Kansas Prepared? An Assessment of Resources Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic
INTRODUCTION. This study investigated rural Kansas healthcare system capacity and critical care-related resources relevant to the care of COVID-19 patients in at the county level i...
Ekonomika bosanskih velikaša u 14. i 15. stoljeću
Ekonomika bosanskih velikaša u 14. i 15. stoljeću
The role and significance of the Bosnian nobility in the historical currents of medieval Bosnia can be reliably traced in the 14th and 15th centuries when various socio-political f...
Frontier communities of Southern Ukraine in the 18th – early 19th century: a response to empires
Frontier communities of Southern Ukraine in the 18th – early 19th century: a response to empires
The article proposes the analysis of new practices of the frontier population of the Southern Ukrainian region during the formation of the linear border and the attempts of the Rus...
Virtualization of the Socio-Cultural Frontier “Tertius Romae”
Virtualization of the Socio-Cultural Frontier “Tertius Romae”
The relevance of the study is due to the need to clarify the semantic core of the sociocultural frontier Tertius Romae. The theoretical construct Tertius Romae by Mark Cicero has u...
Undergraduate Medical Education Leader Performance Predicts Postgraduate Military Leader Performance
Undergraduate Medical Education Leader Performance Predicts Postgraduate Military Leader Performance
ABSTRACT
Introduction
Developing physicians as leaders has gained attention across the United States. Undergraduate medical educ...
Natural philosophy, medieval
Natural philosophy, medieval
Medieval Latin natural philosophy falls into two main periods, before the rise of the universities (mainly in the twelfth century, when works were produced in connection with arist...
Soft Nationalization: How the US Government Will Control AI Labs
Soft Nationalization: How the US Government Will Control AI Labs
We have yet to see anyone describe a critical element of effective AI safety planning: a realistic model of the upcoming role the US government will play in controlling frontier AI...

