
Contents
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Performance Texts and Their Commonalities Performance Texts and Their Commonalities
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Court Audiences and Performance Spaces Court Audiences and Performance Spaces
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Nearness and Distance Nearness and Distance
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Participants and Performers Participants and Performers
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Presence and Mediality Presence and Mediality
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Characters and Perspectives Characters and Perspectives
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Metaperformative Experiences Metaperformative Experiences
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The Interrogative Conscience The Interrogative Conscience
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Conclusion Conclusion
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4. Donne, Shakespeare, and the Interrogative Conscience
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Published:March 2013
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Abstract
Despite their obvious differences, Donne and Shakespeare shared the challenge of engaging an audience. Through a study of the performance texts of The Life of Henry V and two of Donne’s Lenten sermons preached at Whitehall (February 20, 1617/1618 and April 1, 1627), this chapter compares the persuasive strategies used by the two writers to interrogate moral, political, and cultural values and to engage the individual and collective conscience in a medial space of negotiated meaning and identity. Using similarly experiential processes and a manipulation of “nearenesse,” distance, and empathy, they initiated a potentially transformative process of reflection and questioning that put them and their audiences at the forefront of the cultural and political changes of their age.
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