'Carnival and Literature in Early Modern England is an exciting study of transatlantic scope and transhistorical span. Vaught's analysis highlights the cultural and historical specificity of carnival forms and productions, and the different ways they had been appropriated for divergent political ends, normative and transgressive. Juxtaposing early modern poetic and dramatic texts with St. George plays, mummery, street theater, and Mardi Gras productions, Vaught brings out the diverse cultural registers of the festive that would be available to Renaissance audiences, and she reimagines for readers today the traditional cultural literacies early modern writers and audiences brought to the texts and performances.' Joan Linton, Indiana University, USA 'This book offers the reader a rich Carnival of materials, sometimes upsetting ordinary expectations, but always providing a focused interpretation. The extensive footnotes sometimes turn the conventional page of print upside down, the upstart footnote threatening the dominant culture.' Renaissance Quarterly 'For a reader looking for an extensive bibliography on carnival and literature in early modern England and wide-ranging observations on a series of texts, this book could be a useful resource.' The Spenser Review 'This is, certainly, a fascinating study, which traces carnivalesque themes in English literature through some expected, and some far from expected, times and locales; it is highly recommended.' Parergon 'Vaught does a fine job of demonstrating the influence of festive practice on some of the most canonical works of English Renaissance literature; her book will be of keen interest to students of early modern popular culture.' Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 'Vaught has produced a study of considerable scope and ambition, and her readings of the texts collectively illustrate the profound extent to which carnival themes and motifs permeated the literature and culture of early modern England.' Seventeenth-Century News
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