
The Oxford Handbook Of Shakespearean Tragedy Is A Collection Of Fifty-four Essays By A Range Of Scholars From All Parts Of The World, Bringing Together Some Of The Best-known Writers In The Field With A Strong Selection Of Younger Shakespeareans. Together These Essays Offer Readers A Fresh And Comprehensive Understanding Of Shakespeare Tragedies As Both Works Of Literature And As Performance Texts Written By A Playwright Who Was Himself An Experienced Actor. The Collection Is Organised In Five Sections. The Substantial Opening Section Introduces The Plays By Placing Them In A Variety Of Illuminating Contexts: As Well Looking At Ways In Which Later Generations Of Critics Have Shaped Our Idea Of 'shakespearean' Tragedy, It Addresses Questions Of Genre By Examining The Playwright's Inheritance From The Classical And Medieval Past, By Considering Tragedy's Relationship To Other Genres (including History Plays, Tragicomedy, And Satiric Drama), And By Showing How Shakespeare's Tragedies Respond To The Pressures Of Early Modern Politics, Religion, And Ideas About Humanity And The Natural World. The Second Section Is Devoted To Current Textual Issues; While The Third Offers New Critical Readings Of Each Of The Tragedies, From Titus Andronicus To Coriolanus. This Is Set Beside A Group Of Essays That Deal With Performance History, With Screen Productions, And With Versions Devised For The Operatic Stage, As Well As With The Extraordinary Diversity Of Twentieth And Twenty-first Century Re-workings Of Shakespearean Tragedy. The Thirteen Essays Of The Book's Final Section Seek To Expand Readers' Awareness Of Shakespeare's Global Reach, Tracing Histories Of Criticism And Performance Across Europe, The Americas, Australasia, The Middle East, Africa, India, And East Asia. Offering The Richest And Most Diverse Collection Of Approaches To Shakespearean Tragedy Currently Available, The Handbook Will Be An Indispensable Resource For Students Both Undergraduate And Graduate Levels.
This volume investigates the multifaceted nature of Shakespearean tragedy by examining the plays as both literary texts and performance scripts within their historical and global contexts. Editors David Schalkwyk and Michael Neill curate a collection of fifty-four essays from a diverse group of international scholars, ranging from established experts to emerging voices in the field. The work provides a comprehensive framework for understanding how these tragedies function across different media, historical periods, and cultural landscapes.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students frequently identify this collection as a foundational reference for advanced study in Shakespearean drama. The academic density of the prose makes it most suitable for undergraduate and graduate-level research rather than casual reading.
Page Count:
650
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191036145
ISBN-13:
9780191036149
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