Death and Drama in Renaissance England
Shades of Memory
William Engel
Reviews and Awards
"Engel offers intriguing examples...marks a fresh contribution to this scholarship."--Shakespeare Studies Annual
"Engel provides a useful methodology for examining other contemporary works...provocative readings..."--Libraries & Culture
"An intriguingly labyrinthine and learned account of the function of emblems, including emblematic aspects of drama."--Studies in English Literature 1500-1900
"Engel is the first post-Yates scholar to offer a compelling account of the importance of the memory arts in the English Renaissance.... Engel attends with sensitivity and acumen to the complex ways that mnemonic art encodes and enacts its meanings, accomplishing his goal of 'help[ing] scholars of early modern England become better, more mnemonically attuned, interpreters.'... Death and Drama will certainly reinvigorate early modern memory studies, and Engel remains the Renaissance memory arts' most eloquent spokesperson."--Sixteenth Century Journal
"[An] important study of images of death in seventeenth-century English drama, rhetoric, and historiography."--Renaissance Quarterly
"This is dramatic criticism and cultural history of a very high order, learned but not pedantic, an essential book for a fuller understanding of late Elizabethan and early Jacobean tragedy, whether derived from history or from domestic life."--Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance
"A wide-ranging account of the emblematic and mnemonic functions of images of mortality, with implications which extend far beyond the individual plays.... Future work on all such emblematic forms in Elizabethan and Jacobean culture will need to take account of this latest study."--Society for Emblem Studies Newsletter
"Like an emblem book, Death and Drama is capacious in its subject matter; episodic in its rhetorical construction; and often digressive in its argument (a quality which Engel appreciates in Ralegh). All of which adds up to a demanding, unorthodox, and ultimately moving study that remains very difficult to categorize within current disciplinary boundaries."--Clio: Journal of Literature, History and the Philosophy of History
"Certainly loss is what memory both defends us against and promises to overcome. It is Engel's exploration of the ways in which early modern culture sought to come to terms with this recognition that represents Death and Drama's central achievement."--Shakespeare Studies Annual