Philosophical Shakespeares
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Philosophical Shakespeares
(Accents on Shakespeare)
Routledge, 2000
- : hbk
- : pbk
Available at 28 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Shakespeare continues to articulate the central problems of our intellectual inheritance. The plays of a Renaissance playwright still seem to be fundamental to our understanding and experience of modernity.
Key philosophical questions concerning value, meaning and justice continue to resonate in Shakespeare's work. In the course of rethinking these issues, Philosophical Shakespeares actively encourages the growing dissolution of boundaries between literature and philosophy. The approach throughout is interdisciplinary, and ranges from problem-centred readings of particular plays to more general elaborations of the significance of Shakespeare in relation to individual thinkers or philosophical traditions.
Table of Contents
List of contributors General editor's preface Foreword 1. Philosophical Shakespeares: an introduction 2. How many children did she have? 3. On the need for a differentiated theory of (early) modern subjects 4. We were never early modern 5. Violence and philosophy: Nathaniel Merriman, A.W. Schlegel and Jack Cade 6. Reading Shakespeare with intensity: A commentary on some lines from Nietzsche's Ecce Homo 7. Shakespeare's monster of nothing Bibliography
by "Nielsen BookData"