Shakespeare's Binding Language
Autor John Kerriganen Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 ian 2018
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OUP OXFORD – 10 ian 2018 | 252.87 lei 32-37 zile | |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198818359
ISBN-10: 0198818351
Pagini: 640
Dimensiuni: 156 x 231 x 34 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198818351
Pagini: 640
Dimensiuni: 156 x 231 x 34 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Drawing on the bonds, and asseverations, of love, loyalty, debt, faith, promises and all sorts of other things that characters vow to keep or maintain, the book explores the many ways in which Shakespeares plays exploit the potential of the oath to bind as well as break the ties of kinship. Within this Kerrigan offers some compelling and intricate readings of oaths and their roles within the plays (and sometimes Sonnets) discussed.
This outstanding book brings a new level of sophistication to the analysis of promising in Shakespeare's drama.
John Kerrigan's focus in this absorbing, beautifully written study is on the oaths, vows, and pledges we hear uttered by Shakespeare's characters in his plays as they commit themselves to marriage, to legal obligations, and to religious observances, or as they express themselves in the casual profanity of day-to-day gossip ... This fine book offers an extensive set of close readings in a similar vein covering many but not all of Shakespeare's plays. The readings are uniformly brilliant, learned, astutely argued, and insightful.
[An] absorbing, beautifully written study ... This fine book offers an extensive set of close readings in a similar vein covering many but not all of Shakespeares plays. The readings are uniformly brilliant, learned, astutely argued, and insightful.
Shakespeare's Binding Language addresses just about every oath, vow, promise, bond, gage, and contract in the canon ... the significance of Kerrigan's work -- not just in terms of scale, but also in terms of depth of knowledge -- can't be denied.
When you've spent most of your life teaching Shakespeare's plays, you don't expect to stumble upon a book that makes you feel you've failed to understand something essential about them. John Kerrigan's Shakespeare's Binding Language is just such a book ... a profoundly rewarding book. It will prove indispensable, not only for those who enjoy reading the plays, but also for those who direct and act in them.
interesting general history...skilled exercise of literary criticism...the sheer intricacy of individual instances in Shakespeare is amazing...a convincing portrait of the artist as inquirer.
A monumental intervention. This elegant and elaborate examination of the intertwined languages of law and drama will have a lasting impact on the field.
a massive, complicated and brilliant interpretation of the oaths, vows and promises that bind the characters in virtually every one of Shakespeare's plays ... Shakespeare will only endure if we continually reinvent and reinterpret him, and Kerrigan has done just that. We will still be digesting his masterly work on vows and oaths by 2023 and the next Shakespeare celebration, the 400th anniversary of the First Folio's publication.
Given this year's 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death, there was always going to be a slew of new publications; few, I suspect, will have as long-lasting an effect as John Kerrigan's ... It comprises broad historical context ... and attentive readings of the plays ... The depth of subtlety which Kerrigan finds in the handling of ... specific rhetorical forms is compelling ... I read this with enthusiasm.
Shakespeare's Binding Language is among the most imaginative books on Shakespeare to be published this year. ... Kerrigan's view of Shakespeare's characters as bound in a tangle of conflicting promises is ... unique and refreshing.
Scintillating ... brilliant ... both deeply learned and freshly attentive to the language of the plays. ... Criticism at its fighting weight and on the front foot, dancing, feinting, and then deftly deploying the knockout citation ... it is a great achievement.
wide-ranging, remarkably original study, ... a monumental achievement.
Kerrigan is a scholar of boundless critical energy [and] formidable scholarship ... spellbinding ... Hefty as a doorstop, Shakespeare's Binding Language is also edgy as a letter-opener ... It is the gage and measure of where we are with Shakespeare's verbal artistry, and critics will ponder its findings for years to come.
shines new light on the vast array of characters in the canon ... Kerrigan's investigations go the very heart of Shakespeare's world ...
mighty and magisterial ... a timely and erudite book that will surely transform our understanding of the context in which Shakespeare worked and his achievement in producing works that reflect so intelligently on the complicated loyalties demanded by society ... Few works on Shakespeare written in the past 20 years contain so many insights.
[S]ome of the most enjoyable moments are found in the subtle, but suggestive, points made about the better known works, such as the onomastics of the tragedies ... New Historicism still has much to offer the field of Shakespeare studies.
Shakespeare's Binding Language is a remarkably original, stimulating, and beautifully written book that showcases an astounding depth and breadth of knowledge.
brilliant ... dazzling ... capacious, generous ... this book will remain a resource for students and scholars for decades.
This outstanding book brings a new level of sophistication to the analysis of promising in Shakespeare's drama.
John Kerrigan's focus in this absorbing, beautifully written study is on the oaths, vows, and pledges we hear uttered by Shakespeare's characters in his plays as they commit themselves to marriage, to legal obligations, and to religious observances, or as they express themselves in the casual profanity of day-to-day gossip ... This fine book offers an extensive set of close readings in a similar vein covering many but not all of Shakespeare's plays. The readings are uniformly brilliant, learned, astutely argued, and insightful.
[An] absorbing, beautifully written study ... This fine book offers an extensive set of close readings in a similar vein covering many but not all of Shakespeares plays. The readings are uniformly brilliant, learned, astutely argued, and insightful.
Shakespeare's Binding Language addresses just about every oath, vow, promise, bond, gage, and contract in the canon ... the significance of Kerrigan's work -- not just in terms of scale, but also in terms of depth of knowledge -- can't be denied.
When you've spent most of your life teaching Shakespeare's plays, you don't expect to stumble upon a book that makes you feel you've failed to understand something essential about them. John Kerrigan's Shakespeare's Binding Language is just such a book ... a profoundly rewarding book. It will prove indispensable, not only for those who enjoy reading the plays, but also for those who direct and act in them.
interesting general history...skilled exercise of literary criticism...the sheer intricacy of individual instances in Shakespeare is amazing...a convincing portrait of the artist as inquirer.
A monumental intervention. This elegant and elaborate examination of the intertwined languages of law and drama will have a lasting impact on the field.
a massive, complicated and brilliant interpretation of the oaths, vows and promises that bind the characters in virtually every one of Shakespeare's plays ... Shakespeare will only endure if we continually reinvent and reinterpret him, and Kerrigan has done just that. We will still be digesting his masterly work on vows and oaths by 2023 and the next Shakespeare celebration, the 400th anniversary of the First Folio's publication.
Given this year's 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death, there was always going to be a slew of new publications; few, I suspect, will have as long-lasting an effect as John Kerrigan's ... It comprises broad historical context ... and attentive readings of the plays ... The depth of subtlety which Kerrigan finds in the handling of ... specific rhetorical forms is compelling ... I read this with enthusiasm.
Shakespeare's Binding Language is among the most imaginative books on Shakespeare to be published this year. ... Kerrigan's view of Shakespeare's characters as bound in a tangle of conflicting promises is ... unique and refreshing.
Scintillating ... brilliant ... both deeply learned and freshly attentive to the language of the plays. ... Criticism at its fighting weight and on the front foot, dancing, feinting, and then deftly deploying the knockout citation ... it is a great achievement.
wide-ranging, remarkably original study, ... a monumental achievement.
Kerrigan is a scholar of boundless critical energy [and] formidable scholarship ... spellbinding ... Hefty as a doorstop, Shakespeare's Binding Language is also edgy as a letter-opener ... It is the gage and measure of where we are with Shakespeare's verbal artistry, and critics will ponder its findings for years to come.
shines new light on the vast array of characters in the canon ... Kerrigan's investigations go the very heart of Shakespeare's world ...
mighty and magisterial ... a timely and erudite book that will surely transform our understanding of the context in which Shakespeare worked and his achievement in producing works that reflect so intelligently on the complicated loyalties demanded by society ... Few works on Shakespeare written in the past 20 years contain so many insights.
[S]ome of the most enjoyable moments are found in the subtle, but suggestive, points made about the better known works, such as the onomastics of the tragedies ... New Historicism still has much to offer the field of Shakespeare studies.
Shakespeare's Binding Language is a remarkably original, stimulating, and beautifully written book that showcases an astounding depth and breadth of knowledge.
brilliant ... dazzling ... capacious, generous ... this book will remain a resource for students and scholars for decades.
Notă biografică
John Kerrigan is Professor of English 2000 at the University of Cambridge. Among his books are an edition of Shakespeare's Sonnets and A Lover's Complaint (1986), Revenge Tragedy: Aeschylus to Armageddon (1996), and Archipelagic English: Literature, History, and Politics 1603-1707 (2008). He has lectured in many parts of the world and writes for the TLS and the London Review of Books.