J. For and . Parks, Edward II helps bring about, through the infusion of literary form, the type of unified interpretation-with beginning, middle, and end-that we have come to think of as 'history,' and its author explores the significance of such history writing through his meditation on the nature of power, which Edward II transforms its source material proves it to be a major contribution to the genre of the history play, as opposed to the narrative chronicles on which it is based, vol.39, p.289, 1999.

M. Garber, , p.319

, I am here taking up the introductory remarks included in notes to a course on "The telephone in cinema, 2009.

P. Aristotle and S. H. Butcher, London, Macmillan, 1902, chapters X-XI. Letters are as artificial as the deux ex machina, they are not a necessary

, According to scientists, paper cuts are more painful than (equally benign) wounds caused by razors because paper leaves tiny particles in the wound, causing a very unpleasant stinging sensation

, Edward's comment after tearing the letter apart reveals, however, his persistent weakness

, When speaking of "circulation", I am thinking of Stephen Greenblatt only insofar as the letters point to the numerous, well-known narrative accounts of Edward's reign which predate

, Marlowe's play and which constitute a cultural backdrop for the dramatist's oeuvre. See Stephen Greenblatt, Renaissance Self-Fashioning. From More to Shakespeare, 1980.

M. Garber, Subscription and proscription in Marlowe's Edward II Études Épistémè, vol.22, p.320, 2012.

, avec Pascale Drouet, et Language and Otherness in Renaissance Culture, avec Ann Lecercle. Subscription and proscription in Marlowe's Edward II Études Épistémè, vol.21, 2008.