The Music of the Close: The Final Scenes of Shakespeare's Tragedies

Voorkant
University Press of Kentucky, 15 jul 2014 - 240 pagina's

In this book, Walter Foreman studies the closing scenes of Shakespeare's tragedies, considering the tragic structure of the plays and the shapes the tragic characters give their lives by the way they encounter death.

Foreman sees in the variety of tragic endings of the plays evidence that Shakespeare consciously experimented with tragic forms, for when he repeated he also changed, and changed more than superficially. Further, Foreman believes that these varieties and extensions of dramatic form were fundamentally a way of experiencing a various, often mysterious world. Extending and exploring the possibilities of tragic form, the playwright created dramatic worlds that mirror the possibilities of our own.

Among the tragedies, Foreman finds three—Hamlet, King Lear, and Antony and Cleopatra—that are more complex than the rest. He devotes the three final chapters of his book to the closing scenes of these plays and his readings of them are richly rewarding, giving new insights into Hamlet's acceptance of death, Lear's isolation in a moral storm, and Cleopatra's triumphant staging of her own death.

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Geselecteerde pagina's

Inhoudsopgave

1 Tragic Death and Dull Survival
1
2 An Art of Dying
29
3 Hamlet
73
4 King Lear
113
5 Othello and Antony Cleopatra
159
NOTES
203
INDEX
219
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2014)

Walter C. Foreman Jr. is associate professor of English at the University of Kentucky.

Bibliografische gegevens