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Wales

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The Records of Early English Drama (REED) series aims to establish the context for the great drama of Britain's past by examining material related to drama, secular music, and other communal entertainment and ceremony from the Middle Ages until the mid-seventeenth century. This latest volume in the series is a collection of documentary evidence for dramatic performance, minstrelsy, and civic ceremony in the Principality of Wales from the mid-fifth century to 1660. Editor David N. Klausner has included documents relevant to the explicitly Welsh mode of bardic performance as well as evidence of the bardic profession's efforts to regulate itself with a grading system and standards for education and training. Municipal records show payments to civic musicians and other performers, and records of the courts in particular - Star Chamber, Great Sessions, and Quarter Sessions - clarify the existence of local drama on both a professional and non-professional basis, in both Welsh and English, from at least the beginning of the sixteenth century. This volume is a superb addition to the already much-admired REED series and will be of great benefit to anyone interested in Renaissance theatre or Welsh history and culture.

750 pages, Hardcover

First published November 3, 2005

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Heather Jones.
Author 20 books186 followers
May 25, 2014
This is a joint review of David N. Klausner's Records of Early Drama: Wales and Sally Harper's Music in Welsh Culture Before 1650: A Study of the Principal Sources.

Both of these books think they are aimed at the university library market. This is both good and bad. On the good side, they are detailed, exhaustive, and meticulously-documented collections of data with sufficient analysis to contextualize the material, but with the assumption that they will be used as background for further, more interpretive research. They don't tell you what to think; they tell you what you need to know to figure out what to think for yourself. On the bad side, they are quite expensive books (the drama book was $200, the music book normally lists for $100 but I got it at a major conference discount) with essentially no publicity outside those who already know about them.

I'd actually been waiting for Klausner's book for maybe half a decade, ever since I'd met him at a Welsh studies conference and he mentioned it among his works in progress. It's part of a series of sourcebooks on early drama in the British Isles being produced by the University of Toronto Press. Most of the series is organized in volumes based on counties, but the Welsh material seemed to call for a more unified approach, for which we can probably be grateful as it means we get the whole in a single chunk rather than waiting for various authors to finish up their individual projects. Another benefit of Klausner's approach is that, given the relatively scanty material on drama in its strictest sense in the period covered (essentially, up through the mid 17th century), he has expanded the scope of the work to include performance art of all sorts: drama, music, poetry, song. The introduction gives a brief history of Wales and the social context of performance art there, then a discussion and catalog of the types of materials used. And then we get into a long and varied collection of quotations of textual material that describe, discuss, catalog, explain, or simply mention in passing anything related to the performing arts. The texts are given in their original language (and then, in the appendices, in translation). Just to give a sense of the varied nature of the material, here's a summary starting from the front.

Gerald of Wales (references in his Description/Itinerary)
Mentions, especially of bards, in the Welsh laws
A 16th century list of "notable crwth players, harpers, and poets"
Various English laws that concern "minstrels" and "bards" in Wales
Summaries of various lawsuits either involving performers or where performance art was involved in the crime
Various diary and account entries giving payments to performers
Lists of tunes played on various occasions
Descriptions of eisteddfods
Scripts of masques performed in Welsh locations
Wills that mention musical instruments

Although not included in complete form, back when I first met him, Klausner set me on the track of an edition of three short "interlude" plays in Welsh, written around the end of the 16th century.

Harper's book on sources concerning music in Wales (again, up to the mid 17th century) is very similar in approach, with the exception that it identifies, catalogs, and discusses the original source material but doesn't include the original texts (although many are excerpted for illustrative purposes). The book is organized topically, covering native string music, church music, and then "international" music as performed in Wales. The usefulness of this work for the professional scholar goes without saying. For the non-scholar with an interest in pre-modern Welsh music, it supplies a detailed, yet reasonably accessible, summary of the sources, the issues, and the problems. It gives you pointers to those topics where more information is available, and gently lets you down on those topics where there simply isn't anything to be found. There is also an extensive bibliography of research in the field and even a discography of performances of covered material.

I have a suspicion that one of the reasons I'm excessively fond of books like these two is that they match so well my own research tendencies. Because so many of the fields I'm interested in are full of gaps and holes in the available information, my own instincts are to catalog what is there so that readers can build their own interpolations and interpretations rather than giving them a single interpretation (mine) to swallow whole. And when I read other people's research on these sorts of topics, I'm wary of authors that only give me their pre-digested, pre-interpreted conclusions, with a careful selection of the supporting data. I want them to show me all the information they were working from, so that I can come to my own conclusions, if necessary. Others may cry out in frustration, "Just give me a tune to sing and a play to produce!" but I'd rather know where the rotten boards are on the stage.
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