Thomas Rist
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The Eucharist
Sacrificial works on stage
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Developing on ‘works’, this chapter focuses on theatre as a counterpart to Chapter 1’s focus on poetry. The backdrop to its two Roman plays is a papacy perceived in the era by Protestants and Catholics as heirs to the Caesars, analogical habits of mind encouraging typological interpretations and (in the case of Sejanus), the capacity of Tacitean literature to imply comparisons between ancient Rome and early modern England. The chapter introduces the topic of sacrificial works and the sacrifice of the Mass through Juan Luis Vives’s critical edition of Augustine’s City of God: the canonical text for a century and half from 1529. It then locates Jonson’s early Jacobean play Sejanus his Fall, Shakespeare’s Elizabethan Julius Caesar, and John Ford’s Caroline Love’s Sacrifice in this Augustinian context through original and critically informed readings of the plays. A versatile theological theatre in Elizabethan, Jacobean and Caroline England emerges, which inventively addressed questions of Christian salvation from recognisably Catholic viewpoints.

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