This stage-play world: English literature and its background, 1580-1625

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The later years of Elizabeth and the reign of James I were the age of Shakespeare, but the age also of Sidney, Spenser, and Donne, of fellow dramatists Marlowe, Jonson, and Webster, and of the prose writers Nashe, Bacon, and Burton. This book examines the social conditions that produced this uniquely dazzling array of talent, and relates them closely to the literature of the period. In this extensively revised new edition, Julia Briggs has included two new chapters which examine the role of women, the family, travelers and `outsiders' within the social and literary contexts of the period.

225 pages, Hardcover

First published December 15,1983

About the author

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Julia Briggs was a writer and critic of great talents, a gifted scholar and a profoundly generous teacher who pioneered the study of children's literature and of women's writing in universities. Deeply humanist in outlook, she had an abiding belief in the value of literary study and in the power of education to transform lives.

Julia Ballam grew up in London. Her father, Harry, worked in advertising, but also tried his hand at writing. Her mother, Trudi, had been a commercial artist. Julia attended South Hampstead high school and in 1963 won a scholarship to study English at St Hilda's College, Oxford.

Beautiful and brilliant, she also became pregnant at the end of her first year and was, she believed, the first female undergraduate not to be instantly expelled. She married the father, Peter Gold, and stayed on to give birth to her son and take a first-class degree. The marriage was short-lived, and in 1969 she married Robin Briggs, historian and fellow of All Souls College, with whom she had two more sons. They were divorced in 1989.

Julia always followed her literary instincts. At Oxford, while bringing up her family, she wrote a BLitt thesis on the English ghost story - not considered a proper subject for a doctorate - which became Night Visitors (1977), her first book. From 1978 she took up a permanent post as fellow of Hertford College, Oxford. In 1983 she published This Stage Play World: Texts and Contexts 1580-1625, revised in 1997 and still in use by students. She then devoted herself to finishing Donald Crompton's book on William Golding, A View from the Spire (1985), after he died. In 1987 she published a life of the children's writer and Fabian socialist, E Nesbit, A Woman of Passion, which contributed to the emerging study of children's literature, as did Children and Their Books: a Celebration of the Work of Iona and Peter Opie (1989), co-edited with Gillian Avery.

Very active in the Oxford English faculty, which she also chaired, Julia canvassed successfully for courses on women's writing. As general editor of the Penguin paperback re-issue of Virginia Woolf's work, when it came out of copyright in 1991, she oversaw the reprinting of 13 volumes, with introductions by renowned women scholars from Britain and the US, some of whom required delicate handling. She died aged 63 of a brain tumour.

Community Reviews

Rating(4.3 / 5.0, 4 votes)
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4 reviews All reviews
April 26,2025
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Two stars reflects more on my limited interest in all the details; the book is well-written and researched.
April 26,2025
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This historical account of the time period in which Shakespeare was writing really aided me study of Shakespeare as an undergrad - it gave me a context to explore political implications in Hamlet.
April 26,2025
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About as thorough a book, on the promised texts and contexts, as one could hope for in two hundred pages. Tight, challenging, thought-provoking academic writing, with very, very few words wasted, and an engaging structure. It wasn't Shakespeare-heavy either, as one might expect, even in the chapter on Theatre. For me, this was a good thing, not least because there was so much other Elizabethan/Jacobean talent to explore. If you'd like to better understand the conditions which produced a Shakespeare–the formidable education system, religious upheavals, etc.–I find it hard to imagine a better place to start. Worthy of time and reflection.
April 26,2025
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Briggs is a good writer! Some sentences were a bit long for my tastes, but it really is an excellent book on the period. She structures it really well so it's easy to return to parts that might be more relevant to a specific issue than others. Recommended to other students of the period!
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