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E-grāmata: Returning to Shakespeare [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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Returning to Shakespeare addresses two broad areas of Shakespeare criticism: the unity of form and meaning, and the history of the plays’ reception. Originally published in 1989, the collection represents the best of Brian Vickers’ work from the previous fifteen years, in a revised and expanded form.

The first part of the book focuses on the connection between a work’s structural or formal properties and our experience of it. A new study of the Sonnets shows how personal relationships are literally embodied in personal pronouns. An essay on Shakespeare’s hypocrites (Richard III, Iago, Macbeth) analyses the uncomfortable intimacy established between them and the audience by means of soliloquies and asides. Another traces the interplay between politics and the family in Coriolanus, two forms of pressure which combine to push the hero outside society.

In the second part Professor Vickers examines some key episodes in the history of Shakespeare criticism. One essay reviews the persistence of drastically altered adaptations of Shakespeare on the London stage from the 1690s to the 1830s, due to the conservatism of both theatre managers and audience. Another reconstructs the debate over Hamlet’s character in the last quarter of the eighteenth century, in which the Romantic image of a hero lacking control of his faculties emerged for the first time.

This is an important collection by an outstanding Shakespeare critic which will interest specialists and general readers alike.

Acknowledgements viii
Returning to Shakespeare: an autobiographical preface 1(20)
PART I FORMS AND MEANINGS
1 Rites of passage in Shakespeare's prose
21(20)
2 `Mutual render': I and Thou in the Sonnets
41(48)
3 Shakespeare's hypocrites
89(46)
4 Coriolanus and the demons of politics
135(62)
PART II SHAKESPEARE AND HIS CRITICS
5 The emergence of character criticism, 1774--1800
197(15)
6 Shakespearian adaptations: the tyranny of the audience
212(22)
7 Shakespeare, `a national asset'
234(14)
8 Tribute to a scholar--critic
248(5)
Index 253
Brian Vickers