Shakespeare's Noise"You common cry of curs! whose breath I hate / As reek o'th'rotten fens, whose loves I prize / As the dead carcasses of unburied men / That do corrupt my air: I banish you!" (from Coriolanus) Kenneth Gross explores Shakespeare's deep fascination with dangerous and disorderly forms of speaking—especially rumor, slander, insult, vituperation, and curse—and through them offers a vision of the work of words in his plays. Coriolanus's taunts or Lear's curses force us to think not just about how Shakespeare's characters speak, but also about how they hear, overhear, and mishear what is spoken, how rumor becomes tragic knowledge for Hamlet, or opens Othello to fantastic jealousies. Gross also shows how Shakespeare's preoccupation with "noisy" speech echoed and transformed a broader cultural obsession with the perils of rumor, slander, and libel in Renaissance England. Elegantly written and passionately argued, Shakespeare's Noise will challenge and delight anyone who loves his plays, from scholars to general readers, actors, and directors. |
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Contenido
The Rumor of Hamlet | 10 |
The Book of the Slanderer | 33 |
A Disturbance of Hearing in Vienna | 68 |
Denigration and Hallucination in Othello | 102 |
War Noise | 131 |
King Lear and the Register of Curse | 161 |
An Imaginary Theater | 193 |
Notes | 209 |
275 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
abuse accusation actor Angelo answer asks authority become blessing body calls character common Coriolanus Coriolanus's court curse dangerous dead death describes Desdemona desire dream Duke Duke's echo especially example eyes face fact false fame fear feel ghost give Hamlet hear heart human idea imagine Isabella John justice keep kind King knowledge lago language Lear Lear's listen living London look means Measure mouth nature never noise offers once onstage Othello person play poison political present questions rage Renaissance rumor scene seems sense Shakespeare's shame shape shows silence slander sound space speak speech stage story strange suggests theater thing thou thought tion tongues truth turn University Press utterances violence voice wants words wounds writes York