Shakespeare and the Culture of Romanticism

Shakespeare and the Culture of Romanticism
Title Shakespeare and the Culture of Romanticism PDF eBook
Author Joseph M. Ortiz
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 476
Release 2016-12-05
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 135190079X

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The idea of Shakespearean genius and sublimity is usually understood to be a product of the Romantic period, promulgated by poets such as Coleridge and Byron who promoted Shakespeare as the supreme example of literary genius and creative imagination. However, the picture looks very different when viewed from the perspective of the myriad theater directors, actors, poets, political philosophers, gallery owners, and other professionals in the nineteenth century who turned to Shakespeare to advance their own political, artistic, or commercial interests. Often, as in John Kemble’s staging of The Winter’s Tale at Drury Lane or John Boydell’s marketing of paintings in his Shakespeare Gallery, Shakespeare provided a literal platform on which both artists and entrepreneurs could strive to influence cultural tastes and points of view. At other times, Romantic writers found in Shakespeare’s works a set of rhetorical and theatrical tools through which to form their own public personae, both poetic and political. Women writers in particular often adapted Shakespeare to express their own political and social concerns. Taken together, all of these critical and aesthetic responses attest to the remarkable malleability of the Shakespearean corpus in the Romantic period. As the contributors show, Romantic writers of all persuasions”Whig and Tory, male and female, intellectual and commercial”found in Shakespeare a powerful medium through which to claim authority for their particular interests.

Shakespeare and the Romantics

Shakespeare and the Romantics
Title Shakespeare and the Romantics PDF eBook
Author David Fuller
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 240
Release 2021-02-11
Genre Drama
ISBN 019264839X

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Romantic criticism, of which Shakespeare is the central figure, invented many of the modes of modern criticism. It is also distinct from many contemporary academic norms. Engaged with the social and intellectual currents of an age of revolutionary change, it is experimental, writerly, and individually expressive. Above all it is creative in response to the difficulties of understanding aesthetic experience in new ways, and in setting those experiences in new cultural and political contexts that Shakespeare's work helped to shape. This book presents the main currents of these exciting but relatively little known engagements with Shakespeare, and through Shakespeare with the theory and practice of criticism, in England, Germany, and France, from the 1760s in Germany to the aftermath of the Romanticism in France. It also discusses Shakespeare in the theatre of the period—realist stagings which prefigure Shakespeare films; adaptations which fitted Shakespeare to contemporary tastes; and bare-stage experiments which foreshadow modes of contemporary theatre. A chapter on scholarship in the period shows Shakespeare as central to modern editing and historical criticism. Much of the writing discussed is by men and women whose focus is not primarily critical but creative—poetry (Coleridge, Keats, Heine), fiction (Stendhal), drama (Lessing), or all three (Goethe, Hugo), cultural critique (Jameson, de Staël), philosophy (Hamann, Herder), politics (Hazlitt, Guizot), aesthetics (the Schlegel circle), or new original work in other media (Berlioz, Delacroix, Chassériau). It is writing directed to new modes of creating as well as new modes of understanding.

Shakespeare and Ovid

Shakespeare and Ovid
Title Shakespeare and Ovid PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Bate
Publisher Oxford University Press on Demand
Total Pages 292
Release 1994
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0198183240

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This is the first comprehensive account of the relationship between Shakespeare and his favourite poet, Ovid, examining the full range of Shakespeare's works.

European Shakespeares

European Shakespeares
Title European Shakespeares PDF eBook
Author Dirk Delabastita
Publisher John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages 257
Release 1993-01-01
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 9027221308

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Where, when, and why did European Romantics take to Shakespeare? How about Shakespeare's reception in enduring Neoclassical or in popular traditions? And above all: which Shakespeare did these various groups promote? This collection of essays leaves behind the time-honoured commonplaces about Shakespearean translation (the 'translatability' of Shakespeare's forms and meanings, the issue of 'loss' and 'gain' in translation, the distinction between 'translation' and 'adaptation', translation as an 'art'. etc.) and joins modern Shakespearean scholarship in its attempt to lay bare the cultural mechanisms endowing Shakespeare's texts with their supposedly inherent meanings. The book presents a fresh approach to the subject by its radically descriptive stance, by its search for an adequate underlying theory along interdisciplinary lines, and not in the least by its truly European scope. It traces common trends and local features not just in France and Germany, but also in Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Scandinavia, and the West Slavic cultures.

The Romantics on Shakespeare

The Romantics on Shakespeare
Title The Romantics on Shakespeare PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Bate
Publisher
Total Pages 584
Release 1997
Genre English drama
ISBN 9780140436488

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This anthology, the first comprehensive selection of romantic Shakespearian criticism, brings together contributions from contemporary giants of European literature, such as Schlegel, Coleridge, Hazlitt, Hugo and Keats.

Romantic Shakespeare

Romantic Shakespeare
Title Romantic Shakespeare PDF eBook
Author Younglim Han
Publisher Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Total Pages 268
Release 2001
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9780838638736

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These two criticisms are based on the presumption that only a socially and intellectually elite reader is able to view the author's language in terms of its organic relationship with the text as a whole. The Romantics focused on the interpretive reproduction of Shakespeare through sympathetic identification with his characters."--BOOK JACKET.

The Romantics on Shakespeare

The Romantics on Shakespeare
Title The Romantics on Shakespeare PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Bate
Publisher Puffin
Total Pages 600
Release 1992
Genre English literature
ISBN

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