Shakespeare’s Tragic Art

Shakespeare’s Tragic Art
Author: Rhodri Lewis
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2024-10-08
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 0691246696

"In this book Rhodri Lewis argues that Shakespeare's tragedies are a series of experiments that attempt to tell the truth about the world as Shakespeare sees it, and to discover how far he can stretch tragic affirmation to accommodate the darker aspects of this vision. Lewis argues that Shakespeare worked hard to develop an understanding of what tragedy might be good for; that this understanding emerged from his engagement with the traditions of tragic writing and theorizing that had gone before him; that he used this understanding to shape his tragic plays as carefully patterned aesthetic wholes; and that Shakespeare's understanding of the tragic has "as little to do with Hegel as it does with the unities of tragic time, place, and action that many of Shakespeare's peers and successors busied themselves abstracting from Aristotle's Poetics." Lewis begins the book by tracing the ideas and practices of tragedy as they were known to Shakespeare and his contemporaries in the sixteenth century. He then takes a chronological approach to Shakespeare's plays, ultimately seeking to affirm the status of dramatic art in Shakespeare's time as a medium for telling the truth about the human experience in a world that is not fully susceptible to rational analysis"--

Drama and the Sacraments in Sixteenth-Century England

Drama and the Sacraments in Sixteenth-Century England
Author: D. Coleman
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 189
Release: 2007-10-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0230589642

This is the first book-length study of the relationship between early modern drama and sacramental ritual and theology. It examines dramatic forms, such as morality plays. Offering new insights into the religious practices on which early modern subjectivity is founded. Coleman offers radical new ways of reading canonical Renaissance plays.

Lost Plays in Shakespeare's England

Lost Plays in Shakespeare's England
Author: D. McInnis
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2014-10-22
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1137403977

Lost Plays in Shakespeare's England examines assumptions about what a lost play is and how it can be talked about; how lost plays can be reconstructed, particularly when they use narratives already familiar to playgoers; and how lost plays can force us to reassess extant plays, particularly through ideas of repertory studies.