Timothy Hampton
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The theology of cheer, Erasmus to Shakespeare
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Timothy Hampton’s work on ‘The theology of cheer, Erasmus to Shakespeare’ traces the dual nature of cheer as it is used in humanist writings as both a physiological designation of the face and an emotive. He argues that the bodily nature of cheer links practices of the Church and religious belonging to secular practices of sociability and hospitality, and he traces how these circulations of cheer in theological writings become the representational matter of drama. In plays like Richard III, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, and Hamlet, Shakespeare plays upon cheer and its lack to flirt with the destruction of community that is at the heart of tragedy.

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