University Press Copublishing Division / Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Pages: 228
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-61147-824-2 • Hardback • June 2015 • $107.00 • (£82.00)
978-1-61147-826-6 • Paperback • April 2017 • $55.99 • (£43.00)
978-1-61147-825-9 • eBook • June 2015 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
Matthew Kendrick is assistant professor of English at William Paterson University.
Introduction
Chapter One: The Theater between Craft and Commodity
Chapter Two: Crafty Performance in City Comedy: Jonson’s Every Man in his Humour and Chapman, Jonson, and Marston’s Eastward Ho!
Chapter Three: Casting Apprentices in Beaumont’s The Knight of the Burning Pestle
Chapter Four: Thinking with the Feet in Dekker’s The Shoemaker’s Holiday and Rowley’s A Shoemaker, A Gentleman
Chapter Five: Labor and Theatrical Value on the Shakespearean Stage: A Midsummer Night’s Dream and The Tempest
Afterword: Performing Laboring Subjectivity
Bibliography
Kendrick is willing to go father and be more explicitly in his Marxist analysis than has been typical of scholars writing on similar topics. Though this study is not the first to argue that the early modern period is more than simply a precursor to the development of oppositional classes during the industrial era, it makes a particularly thoughtful and often refreshingly polemical case that the absence of a fully formed bourgeoisie and proletariat during the period should not be confused with laborers' passivity to the commodification and alienation of their labor.
— Comparative Drama
Kendrick’s book provides the reader with a clear outlook about labor and laborers in the early modern English theatre.
— Sixteenth Century Journal
This book is useful for explaining labor inside of the plays and how it was experienced by workers employed by the theaters staging them. The materials Kendrick has gathered is not easy to come by, so he has done a great job locating, gathering, sorting and processing archival materials into a package that future researchers can utilize to make further connections on labor and the theater in Early Modern England.
— Pennsylvania Literary Journal