Circumstantial Shakespeare: Oxford Wells Shakespeare Lectures
Autor Lorna Hutsonen Limba Engleză Paperback – feb 2018
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Paperback (1) | 156.93 lei 31-37 zile | |
OUP OXFORD – feb 2018 | 156.93 lei 31-37 zile | |
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OUP OXFORD – 14 oct 2015 | 300.24 lei 31-37 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198816393
ISBN-10: 0198816391
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 130 x 196 x 11 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Wells Shakespeare Lectures
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198816391
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 130 x 196 x 11 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Wells Shakespeare Lectures
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Hutson examines the subtle ways in which the language of the drama inflects sensory experience to produce vivid notions of happening. Arguing against the largely accepted critical commonplace that Shakespeare was disinterested in neo-classical expectations of time and place, Hutson shows how circumstances produced often very dense narratives of experience in which both time and place are clearly and carefully defined.
In this highly original study, Lorna Hutson makes a compelling case that Shakespeare fashioned the fully imagined worlds of his plays out of bits of language that Tudor grammar school students learned to insert in their orations and written compositions to render arguments coherent, probable, and vivid.
... a book that offers a genuinely new way to historicize what is at once the most distinctive and most elusive quality of Shakespeare's art: its almost uncanny ability to represent inner life ... Hutson is an expert in the art of scholarly argument.
Hutson's newest book, Circumstantial Shakespeare continues to refine her impressive insights about theatrical and legal culture in early modern England ... impressive [and] powerful.
brilliant ... For such a slim volume, this punches above its weight in terms of the impact it will have on how we think about Shakespeare's artistry, and the rhetorical techniques that make words feel like lives.
richly and compactly argued ... The implications of the thesis are far-reaching ... Written in an engaging, cerebral style by one of the foremost scholars of Renaissance humanism and theatre, Circumstantial Shakespeare urges a new perspective on Shakespeare's artistry.
In this highly original study, Lorna Hutson makes a compelling case that Shakespeare fashioned the fully imagined worlds of his plays out of bits of language that Tudor grammar school students learned to insert in their orations and written compositions to render arguments coherent, probable, and vivid.
... a book that offers a genuinely new way to historicize what is at once the most distinctive and most elusive quality of Shakespeare's art: its almost uncanny ability to represent inner life ... Hutson is an expert in the art of scholarly argument.
Hutson's newest book, Circumstantial Shakespeare continues to refine her impressive insights about theatrical and legal culture in early modern England ... impressive [and] powerful.
brilliant ... For such a slim volume, this punches above its weight in terms of the impact it will have on how we think about Shakespeare's artistry, and the rhetorical techniques that make words feel like lives.
richly and compactly argued ... The implications of the thesis are far-reaching ... Written in an engaging, cerebral style by one of the foremost scholars of Renaissance humanism and theatre, Circumstantial Shakespeare urges a new perspective on Shakespeare's artistry.
Notă biografică
Lorna Hutson is the Merton Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford. She was educated in San Francisco, Edinburgh and Oxford and has taught at Queen Mary, University of London and at the University of California at Berkeley. Her books include Thomas Nashe in Context (1989), The Usurer's Daughter (1994), Feminism and Renaissance Studies (1999), Rhetoric and Law in Early Modern Europe (with Victoria Kahn, 2001) and The Invention of Suspicion (2007), which won the Roland H. Bainton prize for literature in 2008. She has held fellowships from the Guggenheim, the Folger, the Huntington, the AHRC and the Leverhulme Trust.