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Framing wifely advice in Thomas Heywood's A Curtaine Lecture and Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale.

Publisher Rice University
Publication Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900
Subject Literature/writing
Format Magazine/Journal
ISSN 0039-3657
Issues per Year 4
Volume 48
Issue 1
Published 2008-01-01

Role Type Name
Person Criticism and interpretation Thomas Heywood
Person Works Thomas Heywood
Author n/a Kathleen Kalpin
Person Criticism and interpretation William Shakespeare
Person Works William Shakespeare

Related Content Type
The Winter's Tale eNotes
The Winter's Tale eText
The Winter's Tale Salem on Literature

The frontispiece for Richard Brathwaite's Ar't Asleepe Husband? A Boulster Lecture depicts a husband and wife in bed together. "Why are you silent while I am talking to you?" the wife asks. "I am deaf to dogs," her husband replies. (1) This image of matrimonial discord is a representation of a curtain lecture. Curtain lectures are imaginative reconstructions of private speech between a man and a woman. Typically they appear in male-authored texts that depict a wife speaking persuasively to her husband in bed. This speech scene is most famously represented by Thomas Heywood in A...

[This journal article is 6336 words long]

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