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Title page for ETD etd-04232007-012327


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Tasker, Elizabeth Anne
Author's Email Address lmtasker@att.net
URN etd-04232007-012327
Title Low Brows and High Profiles: Rhetoric and Gender in the Restoration and Early Eighteenth Century Theater
Degree Ph.D.
Department English
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Lynee Lewis Gaillet Committee Chair
Beth Burmester Committee Member
Tanya Caldwell Committee Member
Keywords
  • feminist historical rhetoric
  • rhetoric and performance
  • theater history
  • historical rhetoric
  • Eighteenth century actresses
  • Restoration actresses
  • Restoration theater
  • rhetoric of drama
Date of Defense 2007-04-17
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
The Restoration and early eighteenth-century theaters of London formed an important mixed-gender rhetorical venue, which was acutely focused on the age-old “querrelle des femmes” (or woman question). The immediate popularity of the newly opened Restoration theaters, the new practice of casting actresses rather than actors in female roles, and the libertine social climate of London from 1660 to the early 1700s created a unique rhetorical situation in which women openly participated as speakers and audience members. Through a methodology combining feminist historiography, performance theory, Bitzer’s rhetorical situation, and Habermas’ notion of the public sphere, this dissertation reclaims the Restoration theatre as one of the earliest public, secular, mixed-gender rhetorical venues in the English-speaking world.

London theater of the Restoration and the early eighteenth century presents a feminist kairos for rereading and revisioning the actress from object to subject, from passive receiver to deliverer of performative rhetoric. Overall, the attention given to issues of femaleness in the plays of this period exceeds that of preceding and subsequent periods. The novelty of the actresses, as well as disillusionment with the male-dominated government and system of patriarchy, were major contributing factors that led to the female focus on stage. This phenomenon of female rhetoric also reflects the charisma, elocutionary skill, and visual rhetoric of the best female performers of the period, including: Nell Gwyn, Mary Saunderson Betterton, Elizabeth Barry, Anne Bracegirdle, Susannah Mountfort Verbruggen, Anne Oldfield, and Lavinia Fenton, all of whom are discussed from a rhetorical perspective in this dissertation.

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