Explore how Elizabethan tragedy evolved, revealing the techniques that shape every great tragedy today.
This book surveys the long arc of English tragic form, from medieval roots to Shakespeare’s mastery. It explains what the audience wanted and how dramatists built plays that meet those demands, with a focus on structure, purpose, and the rise of character-driven action.
- See how audience expectations steer dramatic choices across centuries
- Learn about key structural ideas like the arrest of catastrophe and central crises
- Understand Shakespeare’s method: portraying action through character and deed
- Compare Elizabethan practice with later modern stages and other traditions
Ideal for readers of literary history and students studying drama and stage technique.