A renewed focus on classical receptions in early modern English culture has now gone beyond the fundamental questions of whether or not Greek texts were translated into English, or how they were translated, and whether their original language had any cultural value. The question this book engages with is whether either was truly significant and how. What did ‘classical’ mean for them and did ‘classical’ literature, notably Greek, circulate in early modern England in ways comparable to our own conception of it? This book offers fifteen new essays on the receptions of Greek drama in early modern English drama inquiring what a Greek source meant for the English stage.
Silvia Bigliazzi is Professor of English Literature at Verona University, where she is Director of the Skenè Research Centre on drama and theatre studies.
Tania Demetriou is Associate University Professor at the Faculty of English, Cambridge University and a Fellow of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge.