This book takes a new look at the courtly masque--a unique combination of music dance speech and elaborate costume--in early-seventeenth-century England. The essays written by distinguished scholars from around the world present an interdisciplinary approach with experts on dance music visual spectacle and politics all addressing the masque from the point of view of their speciality. Together they reveal how rival factions at the courts of James I and of Charles I represented their clash of viewpoints through dancing and spectacle.
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