Bibliographic Information

Shakespeare

David Bevington

Blackwell, 2002

  • : pbk

Available at  / 15 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

What makes Shakespeare great? Why do we still read and perform his works? In this deft, witty, and unpretentiously short book, David Bevington argues that Shakespeare continues to live among us today because his representations of the human condition are believable, endearing and touchingly human. The book is structured around Shakespeare's arc of human life from infancy and childhood to adulthood, advancing age and eventual death, as set out by Jaques in the so-called 'Seven Ages of Man' speech from As You Like It. Each stage in the life cycle acts as a lens through which the reader can view Shakespeare's major works. The result is a dazzling series of explorations on childhood, sibling rivalry, courtship, the competition of sons with their fathers, career choices and ambitions, disillusionment and loss of traditional faith, marriage, jealousy, midlife crisis, ageing fathers worrying about their daughters' marrying, retirement, and so onward to 'second childishness and mere oblivion'. Bevington reveals that Shakespeare wrote not just about human experience, but from human experience. His works represent a deeply humane portrait of humankind, and of the author himself, in a series of compelling dramatic representations. This is a virtuoso performance by an eminent scholar, widely noted for his great gifts of explication and for his mastery of accessible prose.

Table of Contents

1. All the World's a Stage: Poetry and Theatre. 2. Creeping Like Snail: Childhood, Education, Early Friendship, Sibling Rivalries. 3. Sighing Like Furnace: Courtship and Sexual Desire. 4. Full of Strange oaths and Bearded Like the Pard: The Coming of Age of the Male. 5. Jealous in Honor: Love and Friendship in Crisis. 6. Wise Saws: Political and Social Disillusionment, Humankind's Relationship to the Divine, and Philosophical Skepticism. 7. Modern Instances: Misogyny, Jealousy, Pessimism, and Midlife Crisis. 8. The Lean and Slippered Pantaloon: Aging Fathers and their Daughters.

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