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Rs: Iago and Santiago; Anti-Theatre Controversy |
Shakespeare Electronic Conference, Vol. 4, No. 201. Monday, 31 March 1993.
(1) From: Stanley D. McKenzie <"MCKENZIE SD"@a1.rit.edu>
Date: Sunday, 28 Mar 1993 17:36:00 -0500 (EST)
Subj: RE: SHK 4.0190 Q: Iago and Santiago Matamoros
(2) From: Leo Daugherty <
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Date: Sunday, 28 Mar 93 23:16:27 -0800
Subj: Anthologies of Tudor-Stuart documents for and against the stage
(1)----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Stanley D. McKenzie <"MCKENZIE SD"@a1.rit.edu>
Date: Sunday, 28 Mar 1993 17:36:00 -0500 (EST)
Subject: 4.0190 Q: Iago and Santiago Matamoros
Comment: RE: SHK 4.0190 Q: Iago and Santiago Matamoros
Norman N. Holland comments on the symbolic significance of Iago's
name deriving from Santiago/St. James in his chapter on _Othello_
in _The Shakespearean Imagination_ (1964).
Stan McKenzie
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From: Leo Daugherty <
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>
Date: Sunday, 28 Mar 93 23:16:27 -0800
Subject: Anthologies of Tudor-Stuart documents for and against the stage
Nate Johnson asks a good question, and I'll look forward to hearing
other answers to it than my own -- as I'm forever looking for such
items. One source -- and the only one I can think of which might
possibly be in print -- is J.V. Cunningham, ed., IN SHAKESPEARE'S DAY.
This was a 1970 paperback original by Fawcett. See esp. pp. 159-226.
(It may not provide much in the way of religious objections, however,
although it does give a Stubbes excerpt and a letter from the Lord
Mayor to Whitgift.) I've found this book awfully handy over the years.
-- Leo Daugherty
The Evergreen State College
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