The Cambridge companion to Shakespeare and war

Bibliographic Information

The Cambridge companion to Shakespeare and war

edited by David Loewenstein, Paul Stevens

(Cambridge companions to literature)

Cambridge University Press, 2021

  • : hardback

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Written by a team of leading international scholars, The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and War illuminates the ways Shakespeare's works provide a rich and imaginative resource for thinking about the topic of war. Contributors explore the multiplicity of conflicting perspectives his dramas offer: war depicted from chivalric, masculine, nationalistic, and imperial perspectives; war depicted as a source of great excitement and as a theater of honor; war depicted from realistic or skeptical perspectives that expose the butchery, suffering, illness, famine, degradation, and havoc it causes. The essays in this volume examine the representations and rhetoric of war throughout Shakespeare's plays, as well as the modern history of the war plays on stage, in film, and in propaganda. This book offers fresh perspectives on Shakespeare's multifaceted representations of the complexities of early modern warfare, while at the same time illuminating why his perspectives on war and its consequences continue to matter now and in the future.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Beyond shallow and silence: war in the age of Shakespeare Paul E. J. Hammer
  • 2. Just war theory and Shakespeare Franziska Quabeck
  • 3. Shakespeare on civil and dynastic wars David Bevington
  • 4. Foreign war Claire McEachern
  • 5. War and the classical world Maggie Kilgour
  • 6. 'The question of these wars': Shakespeare, warfare, and the chronicles David Scott Kastan
  • 7. Instrumentalizing anger: warfare and disposition in the Henriad Gail Kern Paster
  • 8. War and Eros David Schalkwyk
  • 9. Shakespeare's language and the Rhetoric of war Lynne Magnusson
  • 10. Staging Shakespeare's wars in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries Michael Hattaway
  • 11. Reading Shakespeare's wars on film: ideology and montage Gregory Semenza
  • 12. Shakespeare and World War II Garrett A. Sullivan Jr
  • 13. Henry V and the pleasures of war Paul Stevens
  • 14. Macbeth and Trauma Willy Maley
  • 15. Coriolanus and the use of power Catherine M. S. Alexander.

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