Reading Shakespeare HistoricallyRoutledge, 2005/07/26 - 216 ページ Reading Shakespeare Historically is a passionate, provocative book by one of the most renowned and popular Renaissance scholars writing today. Charting ten years of critical development, these challenging, witty essays shed new light on Renaissance studies. It also raises intriguing questions about how the culture and history of the past illuminates the key social and political issues of today. Lisa Jardine re-reads Renaissance drama in its historical and cultural context, from laws of defamation in Othello to the competing loyalties of companionate marriage and male friendship in The Changeling. In doing so she reveals a wealth of new insights, sometimes surprising but always original and engrossing. At the same time, these essays also provide a fascinating account of the rise of feminist scholarship since the 1980s and the diversifying of `new historicist' approaches over the same period. Reading Shakespeare Historically will fascinate and provoke students of shakespeare and his historical age, and general readers with an urge to understand how the culture and history of our past illuminates the key scoial and political issues of today. |
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... Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, and Honorary Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. Her many publications include Still Harping on Daughters: Women and Drama in the Age of Shakespeare and Erasmus, Man of Letters ...
... Queen Mary and Westfield College , University of London , and Honorary Fellow of King's College , Cambridge . Her many publications include Still Harping on Daughters : Women and Drama in the Age of Shakespeare and Erasmus , Man of ...
... Queen Mary and West- field College ( QMW ) , in the University of London . Teaching is the corner- stone of our intellectual formation as scholars and critics . If your students cannot follow your train of thought , then you probably ...
... Queen Isabel . So happy be the issue , brother England , Of this good day and of this gracious meeting , As we are now glad to behold your eyes - Your eyes which hitherto have borne in them , Against the French that met them in their ...
... Queen Mary and Westfield College ) . The stage cross - dressing which we had been told in the 1970s that we should ignore as a historically specific stage convention , in the 1980s that we could detect as generating a current of sexual ...
目次
19 | |
Unlawful marriage in Hamlet | 35 |
CULTURAL CONFUSION AND SHAKESPEARES LEARNED | 48 |
Gender dependency and sexual | 65 |
READING AND THE TECHNOLOGY OF TEXTUAL | 78 |
Mercantile exchange and knowledge | 98 |
The scholar of womens history | 132 |
What happens in Hamlet? | 148 |