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dc.contributor.authorPranić, Martina
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-15T13:17:46Z
dc.date.available2022-02-15T13:17:46Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/171332
dc.language.isoencs
dc.publisherUniverzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultacs
dc.subjectMargaret Cavendishcs
dc.subjectearly modern comedycs
dc.subjectfoolscs
dc.subjectfollycs
dc.subjectShakespearecs
dc.subjecthumanismcs
dc.titleCavendish’s Clowns: Uses of Wise Folly in Four Plays by Margaret Cavendishcs
dc.typeVědecký článekcs
dcterms.accessRightsopenAccess
dcterms.licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/
uk.abstract.enThis article explores the significance of the figures of folly in four plays by Margaret Cavendish: The Matrimonial Trouble, published in her first volume of drama, Playes, in 1662, and The Presence, The Bridals and The Convent of Pleasure from the 1668 Plays, Never Before Printed. An author of considerable breadth and some influence in her day, Cavendish, who also published poetry, natural philosophy, essays and a plethora of other genres, wrote at a time when the literature of folly, immensely popular only a few decades earlier, fell out of favour. After close consideration of the ways artificial fools are used in the four aforementioned plays, Cavendish’s decision to include these fools – so far largely passed over in criticism – is interpreted as an example of her creative appropriation of early modern folly as a discursive phenomenon which was, at its height in the works of Erasmus, Shakespeare, Rabelais and others, employed as a way of questioning the knowledge of the ostensibly reasonable world.cs
dc.publisher.publicationPlacePrahacs
uk.internal-typeuk_publication
dc.identifier.doi10.14712/2571452X.2021.62.4
dc.description.startPage54cs
dc.description.endPage77cs
dcterms.isPartOf.nameLitteraria Pragensia
dcterms.isPartOf.journalYear2021
dcterms.isPartOf.journalVolume2021
dcterms.isPartOf.journalIssue62
dcterms.isPartOf.issn2571-452X
dc.relation.isPartOfUrlhttp://litteraria-pragensia.ff.cuni.cz


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