This New Mermaids anthology brings together four plays which centre
around female characters on stage: A Woman Killed With Kindness (Thomas
Heywood); The Tamer Tamed (John Fletcher); The Duchess of Malfi
(John Webster) and The Witch of Edmonton (William Rowley, Thomas
Dekker and John Ford) with a new introduction by leading scholar Emma
Smith.
A Woman Killed with Kindness is a domestic tragedy of property and
marriage, adultery and revenge, and strips bare two women's lives in one
of the first tragedies ever to be written about ordinary people.
*
The Tamer Tamed* is a free-wheeling and witty comedy in which the place
and status of women, and the nature of marriage, are subjected to
sustained attention, demonstrating one way in which early modern writers
were able to challenge and invert social convention, and to at least
imagine alternative modes of behaviour.
*
The Duchess of Malfi* is a classic revenge tragedy and masterpiece of
the Jacobean bizarre, featuring a severed hand, a wolf-man, and a
poisoned Bible.
*
The Witch of Edmonton* is a domestic tragedy in which Elizabeth Sawyer
sells her soul to the Devil to revenge her neighbours.
These four early modern plays plays upset old certainties about gender
ideology: less 'chaste, silent and obedient' and more diverse, eloquent,
and complex.