Shakespeare at WorkClarendon Press, 1995 - 292 páginas It is now accepted that Shakespeare revised many of his most celebrated plays. But how were the great tragedies altered and with what effects? John Jones looks at the implications of Shakespeare's revisions for the reader and spectator alike and shows the playwright getting to grips with the problems of characterization and scene formation in such plays as Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and Troilus and Cressida. In characteristically lucid and accessible prose, John Jones assesses recent textual scholarship on Shakespeare's revisions and illuminates the artistic impact of the revised texts and their importance for our understanding of each play's moral and metaphysical foundations. Shakespeare at Work brings together English literature's greatest writer and one of its most distinguished critics. the result is a book that will be essential and entertaining reading for scholars, students, and Shakespeare enthusiasts alike. |
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FIRST | 11 |
Sir Thomas More | 11 |
The History Plays especially | 36 |
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acting actor appears asked audience bad quarto becomes called Claudius compositor Cordelia Coriolanus course crowd scene death Denmark Desdemona dramatic Emilia fact Folio addition Folio-only ghost play give Gloucester Guildenstern Hamlet hand happens heart Hecuba hendiadys Henry hero History Horatio husband Iago idea imagine improvement kind King Lear Laertes Lear's look lord madness manuscript matter means mind nature never Ophelia Othello pair passage perhaps play play's Polonius present Prince printed quantity variants Quarto and Folio Quarto Lear Quarto text question reading reason renaissance repetition rhetorical Richard Richard II romance Rosencrantz seems sense Shake Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare's draft Shakespeare's revision Shakespearian short line Sir Thomas skull soliloquy speak speare's speech stage suggest T. S. Eliot talk textual theatre thing tragic Troilus and Cressida truth turn universal tragedy verse versions Willow Song Winter's Tale words