S T R U C T U R E
What affects a structure? I've spent some time toying with this question throughout the week. While our group has landed upon further researching the dramatic structure of the late Middle English cycle plays, specifically at the N-Town Plays, we have spent even more time investigating the time period and developing our own structure. Many different sources impact our group's structure of this project, similarly to the outside forces that were impacting the dramatic structure of the 15th century medieval period. With a mass of information available for the Middle Ages in England, what proved most important in developing a structure was first digging through a mass amount of text in order to find what was relatable to other pieces of information, and what we could actually use. I told my group in class that it felt as if we were slowly chipping away at a huge block of ice in order to find a small piece of useful treasure.
In my personal research I have been able to "chip away" at a decent amount of material. So far, I have been able to find roughly 2, possibly 3 sources what have proved helpful for me in research, with the hope to find even more sources to shed light on this topic. One of my sources,
Medieval English Drama; Essays Critical And Contextual, greatly aided in my understanding of the initial structure of cycle plays. A quote that I found most insightful in this source, regarding the question of structure uniformity in the different Middle English cycle plays (which lead me to an interest in investigating the N-Town Plays 'or the Hegge cycle' further) was, "The proposal that the Middle English cycle plays are unified seems inconsistent with their multiple authorship and the continuous revision they underwent. Yet, we must be prepared to admit, as Hardin Craig, for example does with respect to the Hegge cycle, the marvel of 'a theological intelligence motivated by structural imagination that lasted from age to age in the development of a great cycle of mystery plays.'" What this quote is doing is stating that despite what seems to be just a chronological cycle of loosely strung together plays, what actually we need to be investigating is how religion impacts the period and motivates the structure created that gave us these great cycle plays. What I chose to do because of this was to further research the N-Town Plays, some times are referred to as mystery plays. Currently I am digging through information both about the time period, the dramatic structure of the cycle plays, as well as the N-Town Plays and how their structure varied and was influenced by religion and the politics of the time. One question I would like to answer is why these plays underwent constant revision. My hope is to make even more sense of the structure I am laying out this information in, as I am trying to further break down the structure of these cycle plays.
In regards to the tools this class has already laid out for me, I feel confident in the fact and I can begin breaking down information and the research the group and myself are bringing in for our topic. In other words, we will continue to effectively dig through "shit," in order to hopefully learn something about how theatre and society functioned in the 15th century.
- Lindsey Siders
Sources Found:
Fitzhenry, William. “The N-Town Plays and the Politics of Metatheatre.” Studies in Philology 100.1 (Winter 2003): 22-43. Print.
Taylor, Jerome, and Alan H. Nelson. Medieval English Drama; Essays Critical And Contextual. Ed. Jerome Taylor And Alan H. Nelson. n.p. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1972. Print.