Shakespearean Tragedy

Shakespearean Tragedy
Title Shakespearean Tragedy PDF eBook
Author Andrew Cecil Bradley
Publisher
Total Pages 510
Release 1922
Genre
ISBN

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The Cambridge Companion to Shakespearean Tragedy

The Cambridge Companion to Shakespearean Tragedy
Title The Cambridge Companion to Shakespearean Tragedy PDF eBook
Author Claire McEachern
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 325
Release 2013-08-08
Genre Drama
ISBN 110701977X

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This updated Companion has been fully revised and includes an extensively overhauled bibliography and four new chapters by leading scholars.

Shakespeare and Tragedy

Shakespeare and Tragedy
Title Shakespeare and Tragedy PDF eBook
Author John Bayley
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 290
Release 2021-03-30
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1000350444

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Every generation develops its own approach to tragedy, attitudes successively influenced by such classic works as A. C. Bradley’s Shakespearean Tragedy and the studies in interpretation by G. Wilson Knight. A comprehensive new book on the subject by an author of the same calibre was long overdue. In his book, originally published in 1981, John Bayley discusses the Roman plays, Troilus and Cressida and Timon of Athens as well as the four major tragedies. He shows how Shakespeare’s most successful tragic effects hinge on an opposition between the discourses of character and form, role and context. For example, in Lear the dramatis personae act in the dramatic world of tragedy which demands universality and high rhetoric of them. Yet they are human and have their being in the prosaic world of domesticity and plain speaking. The inevitable intrusion of the human world into the world of tragedy creates the play’s powerful off-key effects. Similarly, the existential crisis in Macbeth can be understood in terms of the tension between accomplished action and the free-ranging domain of consciousness. What is the relation between being and acting? How does an audience become intimate with a protagonist who is alienated from his own play? What did Shakespeare add to the form and traditions of tragedy? Do his masterpieces in the genre disturb and transform it in unexpected ways? These are the issues raised by this lucid and imaginative study. Professor Bayley’s highly original rethinking of the problems will be a challenge to the Shakespearean scholar as well as an illumination to the general reader.

William Shakespeare Tragedies

William Shakespeare Tragedies
Title William Shakespeare Tragedies PDF eBook
Author William Shakespeare
Publisher Simon and Schuster
Total Pages 704
Release 2020-04-14
Genre Drama
ISBN 1645171868

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Twelve of Shakespeare’s most profound and moving dramas in one elegant volume. William Shakespeare’s tragedies introduced the world to some of the most well-known characters in literature, including Romeo, Juliet, Macbeth, Hamlet, King Lear, and Othello. This handsome Word Cloud volume includes all twelve works from the First Folio that are commonly classified as tragedies—but the feelings that Shakespeare’s words can evoke range across the spectrum of human emotion.

Shakespearean Tragedy

Shakespearean Tragedy
Title Shakespearean Tragedy PDF eBook
Author John Drakakis
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 465
Release 2014-06-06
Genre Drama
ISBN 131789989X

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Shakespearean Tragedy brings together fifteen major contemporary essays on individual plays and the genre as a whole. Each piece has been carefully chosen as a key intervention in its own right and as a representative of an influential critical approach to the genre. The collection as a whole, therefore, provides both a guide and explanation to the various ways in which contemporary criticism has determined our understanding of the tragedies, and the opportunity for assessing the wider issues such criticism raises. The collection begins by considering the impact of social semiotics on approaches to the tragedies, before moving on to deal, in turn, with the various forms of Marxist criticism, New Historicism, Cultural Materialism, Feminism, Psychoanalysis, and Poststructuralism.

Shakespearian Tragedy

Shakespearian Tragedy
Title Shakespearian Tragedy PDF eBook
Author H. B. Charlton
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 262
Release 1948
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0521081041

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H. B. Charlton focuses on Shakespeare's tragedies specifically as plays along with the themes of man and morality.

Shakespearean Tragedy

Shakespearean Tragedy
Title Shakespearean Tragedy PDF eBook
Author A. Bradley
Publisher Penguin UK
Total Pages 480
Release 2005-07-28
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0141910844

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A.C. Bradley put Shakespeare on the map for generations of readers and students for whom the plays might not otherwise have become "real" at all' writes John Bayley in his foreword to this edition of Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear and Macbeth. Approaching the tragedies as drama, wondering about their characters as he might have wondered about people in novels or in life, Bradley is one of the most liberating in the line of distinguished Shakespeare critics. His acute yet undogmatic and almost conversational critical method has—despite fluctuations in fashion—remained enduringly popular and influential. For, as John Bayley observes, these lectures give us a true and exhilarating sense of 'the tragedies joining up with life, with all our lives; leading us into a perspective of possibilities that stretch forward and back in time, and in our total awareness of things.