Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800 Books

3248 products


  • Cambridge University Press Boiotia in Antiquity

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisBoiotia was - next to Athens and Sparta - one of the most important regions of ancient Greece. Albert Schachter, a leading expert on the region, has for many decades pioneered and fostered the exploration of it and its people through his research. His seminal publications have covered all aspects of its history, institutions, cults, and literature from late Mycenaean times to the Roman Empire, revealing a mastery of the epigraphic evidence, archaeological data, and the literary tradition. This volume conveniently brings together twenty-three papers (two previously unpublished, others revised and updated) which display a compelling intellectual coherence and a narrative style refreshingly immune to jargon. All major topics of Boiotian history from early Greece to Roman times are touched upon, and the book can be read as a history of Boiotia, in pieces.Table of ContentsPart I. Introduction: 1. Boiotian beginnings: the creation of an ethnos; Part II. History: Boiotian: 2. Kadmos and the implications of the tradition for Boiotian history; 3. Boiotia in the sixth century BC; 4. The early Boiotoi: from alliance to federation; 5. Politics and personalities in classical Thebes; 6. Tanagra: the geographical and historical context; 7. From hegemony to disaster: Thebes from 362 to 335; 8. Pausanias and Boiotia; Part III. History: Boiotian and Other: 9. The politics of dedication: two Athenian dedications at the sanctuary of Apollo Ptoieus in Boiotia; 10. The seer Tisamenos and the Klytiadai; Part IV. Boiotian Institutions: 11. Gods in the service of the state: the Boiotian experience; 12. Boiotian military elites (with an appendix on the funereal stelai); 13. Three generations of magistrates from Akraiphia; Part V. Literature: 14. Simonides' elegy on Plataia: the occasion of its performance; 15. The singing contest of Kithairon and Helikon: Korinna fr. 654 PMG col. i and ii.1-11: content and context; 16. Ovid and Boiotia; Part VI. Cult: 17. The Daphnephoria of Thebes; 18. Reflections on an inscription from Tanagra; 19. Egyptian cults and local elites in Boiotia; 20. Evolutions of a mystery cult: the Theban Kabiroi; 21. The Mouseia of Thespiai: organization and development; 22. Tilphossa: the site and its cults; 23. A consultation of Trophonios (IG 7.4136).

    1 in stock

    £75.99

  • Cambridge University Press Lord Rochester in the Restoration World

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis collection of interdisciplinary essays by a team of international scholars focuses new attention on Lord Rochester's writings; on their political force and social identity, on the worlds from which they emerged and which they disclose, and not least on their unsettling aesthetic power.Table of Contents1. Lord Rochester in the Restoration world: introduction Matthew C. Augustine and Steven N. Zwicker; 2. John Wilmot and the writing of 'Rochester' Jonathan Sawday; 3. From script to print: marketing Rochester Paul Davis; 4. Trading places: Lord Rochester, the Laureate, and the making of literary reputation Matthew C. Augustine; 5. Lord Rochester: a life in gossip Steven N. Zwicker; 6. Rochester and the satiric underground Nicholas von Maltzahn; 7. Rochester, the theatre, and restoration theatricality David Francis Taylor; 8. Rochester and the play of values Christopher Tilmouth; 9. Sexual and religious libertinism in Restoration England Tim Harris; 10. Sex and sovereignty in Rochester's writing Melissa E. Sanchez; 11. Rochester, Behn, and Enlightenment liberty Ros Ballaster; 12. Unfit to print: Rochester and the poetics of obscenity Tom Jones; 13. The perspective of Rochester's letters Nicholas Fisher; 14. Rochester and rhyme Tom Lockwood.

    1 in stock

    £81.00

  • Cambridge University Press Home and Nation in British Literature from the English to the French Revolutions

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn innovative account exploring the concepts of 'home' and 'nation' as they developed in Britain between the English Civil War and the Napoleonic Wars. The range of texts and concepts covered by an international team of experts will appeal to a broad spectrum of scholars and students of British literature.Table of Contents1. Introduction A. D. Cousins and Geoffrey Payne; Part I. The English Revolution and the Interregnum: 2. Nation, nature, and poetics: transitions and claspes in Denham's 'Cooper's Hill' and Cavendish's Poems and Fancies L. E. Semler; 3. Home and nation in Andrew Marvell's Bermudas A. D. Cousins; 4. Anne Clifford and Samuel Pepys: diaries and homes Helen Wilcox; 5. Home and away in the poetry of Andrew Marvell and some of his influences and contemporaries Nigel Smith; Part II. Restoration, Glorious Revolution, and Hanoverian Succession: 6. 'Home to our People': nation and kingship in late seventeenth-century political verse Abigail Williams; 7. 'Yet Israel still serves': home and nation in Milton's Samson Agonistes William Walker; 8. 'A thing remote': Defoe and the home in the metropolis and New World Geoffrey Payne; 9. Pope's homes: London, Windsor Forest, and Twickenham Pat Rogers; 10. Samuel Johnson and London Evan Gottlieb; 11. Contesting 'home' in eighteenth-century women's verse Catherine Ingrassia; 12. Home, homeland and the Gothic David Punter; Part III. Revolution in France, Reaction in Britain: 13. Contesting the homeland: Burke and Wollstonecraft Daniel I. O'Neill; 14. Homelands: Blake, Albion, and the French Revolution David Fallon; 15. Jane Austen and the modern home Gary Kelly; 16. 'All things have a home but one': exile and aspiration, pastoral and political in Shelley's The Mask of Anarchy and Keats's 'Ode to a Nightingale' and 'To Autumn' Geoffrey Payne; 17. Sir Walter Scott: home, nation, and the denial of revolution Dani Napton; Guide to further reading.

    3 in stock

    £81.00

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare and Renaissance Ethics

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisLooking at Shakespeare's depictions of moral deliberation and individual choice in light of Renaissance debates about ethics, this collection illuminates Shakespeare's engagement with the most pressing moral questions of his time. It is of great interest to scholars of Shakespeare and Renaissance studies, and the history of ethics.Table of ContentsIntroduction: rethinking Shakespeare and ethics Patrick Gray and John D. Cox; Part I. Shakespeare and Classical Ethics: 1. Fame, eternity, and Shakespeare's Romans Gordon Braden; 2. Shakespeare and the ethics of laughter Indira Ghose; 3. Aristotelian shame and Christian mortification in Love's Labour's Lost Jane Kingsley-Smith; 4. Shakespeare's Vergil: empathy and The Tempest Leah Whittington; Part II. Shakespeare and Christian Ethics: 5. Shakespeare's prayers John D. Cox; 6. The morality of milk: Shakespeare and the ethics of nursing Beatrice Groves; 7. Hamlet the rough-hewer: moral agency and the consolations of Reformation thought Russell M. Hillier; 8. 'Wrying but a little'? Marriage, punishment, and forgiveness in Cymbeline Robert S. Miola; Part III. Shakespeare and the Ethical Thinking of Montaigne: 9. 'Hide thy selfe': Montaigne, Hamlet, and Epicurean ethics Patrick Gray; 10. Conscience and the god-surrogate in Montaigne and Measure for Measure William M. Hamlin; 11. Shakespeare, Montaigne, and classical reason Peter Holbrook; 12. Madness, proverbial wisdom, and philosophy in King Lear Peter Mack.

    10 in stock

    £81.00

  • Cambridge University Press Writing Performative Shakespeares New Forms for Performance Criticism

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis innovative study offers a genuinely groundbreaking approach to Shakespeare in performance. Six chapters work like case studies, each highly creative in terms of visual form and structure - including puzzles, comics and pinboards - inviting the reader into playful engagement with the performative dimensions of Shakespearean production. The case studies include discussion of training and rehearsal processes; the materiality of the performance event and its various embodiments; the intertextual citations through which productions make meaning; and, in response to all of this, the multiplicity and variety of audience perspectives and interpretations. Conkie's production choices range from original practices to politicised adaptations, small-scale workshops to multimedia spectacles, offering inventive analyses of what Shakespeare might mean, or can be made to mean, at particular times and in specific places, at the start of the twenty-first century.Trade Review'This is an ambitious and innovative book, which breaks genuinely new ground in Shakespeare performance studies, and which will make a significant contribution to the field … There are plenty of Shakespeareans who work practically, and many who work in conversation with professional practitioners, but relatively few who subject this experience to the kind of searching interrogation that is found here … This is a terrifically enjoyable and provocative read, one that suggests new avenues of enquiry and new ways of navigating them.' Robert Shaughnessy, University of KentTable of ContentsIntroduction; 1. Materialising Shakespeare; 2. Sudoku Shakespeare; 3. Red button Shakespeare; 4. Graphic Shakespeare with Bernard Caleo; 5. Engaging Shakespeare; 6. Ghosting Shakespeare; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

    1 in stock

    £57.00

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare and the Admirals Men

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisFor most of the 1590s, the Admiral''s Men were the main competitors of Shakespeare''s company in the London theatres. Not only did they stage old plays by dramatists such as Christopher Marlowe and Thomas Kyd: their playwrights invented the genres of humours comedy (with An Humorous Day''s Mirth) and city comedy (with Englishmen for My Money), while other new plays such as A Knack to Know an Honest Man and The Downfall of Robert, Earl of Huntingdon were important influences on Shakespeare. This is the first book to read the Admiral''s repertory against Shakespeare''s plays of the 1590s, showing both how Shakespeare drew on their innovations and how his plays influenced Admiral''s dramatists in turn. Shedding new light on well-known plays and offering detailed analysis of less familiar ones, it offers a fresh perspective on the dramatic culture of the 1590s.Trade Review'Tom Rutter's book on the Admiral's Men and their repertoire does an admirable job of detailing the complementary relationships between London stage companies of the time.' Paul Innes, Modern Language Review'… a carefully deliberated set of studies, undogmatic, alert to fine detail and, therefore, quietly enriching.' John Jowett, Cahiers Élisabéthains'… offers a valuable contribution both to theatre history and to dramatic criticism …' Tracey Hill, Renaissance Studies'By suggesting that Shakespeare was continually responding to theatrical development, Tom Rutter provides a layered and nuanced idea of what a Shakespearean 'source' - or equally a Shakespearean influence - might in fact be, and expands the field as a result …' Tiffany Stern, The Times Literary Supplement'Rutter displays deep knowledge of the plays he discusses and of the scholarship that precedes him. His book, lucid and economical in style, introduces new perspectives on the plays and lays out numerous intertextual connections. The book will have a long shelf life as required reading for students and scholars of Renaissance drama …' Donna B. Hamilton, Early TheatreTable of ContentsAcknowledgements; Note on dating; Introduction; 1. 'How might we make a famous comedie': from A Knack to Know an Honest Man to The Merchant of Venice; 2 'Hobgoblins abroad': from Doctor Faustus to A Midsummer Night's Dream; 3. 'I speak of Africa and golden joys': Henry IV and the Stukeley plays; 4. 'Sundrie variable and pleasing humors': new comedies, 1597–8; 5. 'Nor pure religion by their lips profaned': Oldcastle, Robin Hood, and As You Like It; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

    3 in stock

    £85.50

  • Cambridge University Press Childhood Education and the Stage in Early Modern England

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhat did childhood mean in early modern England? To answer this question, this book examines two key contemporary institutions: the school and the stage. The rise of grammar schools and universities, and of the professional stage featuring boy actors, reflect the culture''s massive investment in children. In this collection, an international group of well-respected scholars examines how the representation of children by major playwrights and poets reflected the period''s educational and cultural values. This book contains chapters that range from Shakespeare and Ben Jonson to the contemporary plays of Tom Stoppard, and that explore childhood in relation to classical humanism, medicine, art, and psychology, revealing how early modern performance and educational practices produced attitudes to childhood that still resonate to this day.Trade Review'Childhood, Education, and the Stage in Early Modern England, edited by Richard Preiss and Deanne Williams, was one of the best collections of essays I read this year, drawing on recent critical interest in children's literature, and in the cultural history of children more broadly, to write new chapters on the theatrical history of the period, to redirect attention to the place of education in early modern society, and in this way to illuminate the complex thematic place that children occupy in the dramatic imagination of Shakespeare and his contemporaries.' SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900'This volume makes a valuable contribution to the field of early modern childhood studies generally, and Renaissance drama more specifically, and paves the way for further work.' Katie Knowles, The Review of English Studies'… a rounded, impressively researched picture of children's varying roles in the realities and imaginaries of the period, shining a welcome light into several unchecked corners of this increasingly crowded field. Taken either separately or as a whole, the contributors pave the way for countless areas of future scholarly endeavour, establishing new directions and initiating conversations which, like the early modern children on whom they centre, are filled to the brim with exciting potential.' Harry R. McCarthy, Early Theatre'The diversity of perspectives gives the volume multiple points of entry, which should appeal to readers from different disciplinary backgrounds. Students interested in the history of childhood in the early modern period, as well as those interested in the history of performing children more directly, will find much to admire here.' Marlis Schweitzer, Childhood in the Past'[This] wonderful edited collection brings together three major discourses - childhood, education, and theater - to demonstrate how these concepts 'grew up together in the early modern period' and to provide a 'new view of the literary and the social meaning of the young in early modern England'.' Edel Lamb, Renaissance Quarterly'The essays in the volume are consistently excellent. Each is learned, meticulous, and original, making the volume as a whole a substantial contribution to scholarship, and individual essays offer valuable interventions in a range of fields including Shakespeare, Milton, and Marvell studies, and the history of the theater. … scholars with many different preoccupations will find it repays their attention.' Elizabeth Hanson, Journal of the History of Childhood and YouthTable of ContentsPart I. Shakespearean Childhoods: 1. Hamlet's boyhood Seth Lerer; 2. The traffic in children: shipwrecked Shakespeare, precarious Pericles Joseph Campana; 3. Incapable and shallow innocents: mourning Shakespeare's children in Richard III and The Winter's Tale Charlotte Scott; Part II. Beyond the Boy Actor: 4. Speaking like a child: staging children's speech in early modern drama Lucy Munro; 5. Shakespeare versus Blackfriars: satiric comedy, domestic tragedy, and the boy actor in Othello Bart Van Es; 6. Cupid's metamorphosis: John Lyly's Love's Metamorphosis and the return of the children's playing companies Bastian Kuhl; Part III. Girls and Boys: 7. The further adventures of Ganymede Stephen Orgel; 8. Chastity, speech, and the girl masquer Deanne Williams; 9. Milton and female perspiration Douglas Trevor; Part IV. Afterlives: 10. 'Too green/yet for lust, but not for love': Andrew Marvell and the invention of children's literature Blaine Greteman; 11. All Macbeth's sons James J. Marino; 12. Modern retrospectives: childhood and education in Tom Stoppard's Shakespearean plays Elizabeth Pentland.

    4 in stock

    £54.14

  • Cambridge University Press Edmund Spenser in Context

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisEdmund Spenser''s poetry remains an indispensable touchstone of English literary history. Yet for modern readers his deliberate use of archaic language and his allegorical mode of writing can become barriers to understanding his poetry. This volume of thirty-seven essays, written by distinguished scholars, offers a rich introduction to the literary, political and religious contexts that shaped Spenser''s poetry, including the environment in which he lived, the genres he drew upon, and the influences that helped to fashion his art. The collection reveals the multiple personae that Spenser constructs within his work: to read Spenser is to read a rich archive of literary forms, and this volume provides the contexts in which to do so. A reading list at the end of the volume will prove invaluable to further study.Table of ContentsIntroduction Andrew Escobedo; Part I. Spenser's Environment: 1. Pedagogy, education, and early career Andrew Wallace; 2. Laureate career-fashioning William A. Oram; 3. Patrons Richard McCabe; 4. Church controversy Gregory Kneidel; 5. Figures of Elizabeth Anna Riehl Bertolet; 6. Publication and the book marketplace Andrew Zurcher; 7. Colonialism and the New World Brian Lockey; 8. Colonialism and Irish plantation Thomas Herron; 9. Spenser's Irish circle Willy Maley; 10. Land, boundaries, and borders Philip Schwyzer; Part II. Genre and Craft: 11. Epic David Quint; 12. Pastoral Katherine Little; 13. Romance Clare Kinney; 14. The Bible and biblical hermeneutics Jamie Ferguson; 15. Allegory: theory and practice Judith H. Anderson; 16. Complaint and satire William Kerwinl; 17. Renaissance literary theory Gordon Teskey; 18. Renaissance rhetorical theory Michael Hetherington; 19. Poetry and the Commonwealth Cathy Shrank; 20. Poetical history John E. Curran, Jr; 21. Premodern literary character Andrew Escobedo; 22. Prosody Paul J. Hecht; Part III. Influences and Analogues: 23. Virgil David Scott Wilson-Okamura; 24. Ovid Syrithe Pugh; 25. Petrarch Patrick Cheney; 26. Chaucer Craig A. Berry; 27. The Sidney circle Mary Ellen Lamb; 28. Spenser's French connection Anne Lake Prescott; 29. Plato and Platonism William Junker; 30. Aristotle and the virtues Joe Moshenska; 31. Protestant theology and devotion Beth Quitslund; 32. Emblem and iconography Sarah Howe; 33. Saints, legends, and calendars Susannah Brietz Monta; 34. Cosmology and cosmography Ayesha Ramachandran; 35. Early modern ecology Julian Yates; 36. Sex and eroticism in the Renaissance Melissa E. Sanchez; 37. Gender in the 1590 Faerie Queene Kimberly Anne Coles; Further reading; Index.

    10 in stock

    £100.70

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare Survey Volume 68 Shakespeare Origins and Originality

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisShakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production which has published the best international scholarship in English since 1948. The theme for Volume 68 is 'Shakespeare, Origins and Originality'. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at http://www.cambridge.org/online/shakespearesurvey.Table of Contents1. Shakespeare's anecdotal character Margreta de Grazia; 2. What is a source? Or, how Shakespeare read His Marlowe Laurie Maguire and Emma Smith; 3. Imitation or collaboration? Marlowe and the early Shakespeare canon Gary Taylor and John V. Nance; 4. 'O Jephthah, judge of Israel': from original to accreted meanings in Hamlet's allusion Péter Dávidházi; 5. The elephants' graveyard revisited: Shakespeare at work in Antony and Cleopatra, Romeo and Juliet and All's Well That Ends Well Catherine Belsey; 6. 'Every like is not the same': translating Shakespeare in Spanish today Alfredo Michel Modenessi; 7. Reading originals by the light of translations Tom Cheesman; 8. 'My name is Will': Shakespeare's sonnets and autobiography Stanley Wells; 9. Tracings and data in The Tempest: author, world and representation Janet Clare; 10. Shakespearean gesture: narrative and iconography Farah Karim-Cooper; 11. The origin of the late Renaissance dramatic convention of self-addressed speech James Hirsh; 12. Reading in their present: early readers and the origins of Shakespearian appropriation Jean-Christophe Mayer; 13. Shakespeare out of time (or, Hugo takes dictation from the beyond) Ruth Morse; 14. Betrayal, derail, or a thin veil: the myth of origin Bi-qi Beatrice Lei; 15. Global Shakespeares, affective histories, cultural memories Jyotsna G. Singh and Abdulhamit Arvas; 16. Spinach and tobacco: making Shakespearian unoriginals Peter Holland; 17. Ren Fest Shakespeare: the cosplay Bard Andrew James Hartley; 18. 'Dead as earth': contemporary topicality and myths of origin in King Lear and The Shadow King Kate Flaherty; 19. Shakespeare and the idea of national theatres Michael Dobson; 20. John Rice and the boys of the Jacobean King's Men David Kathman; 21. Shakespeare's Irish lives: the politics of biography Andrew Murphy; 22. Shakespeare in blockaded Berlin: the 1948 'Elizabethan Festival' Bettina Boecker; 23. Connecting the Globe: actors, audience and entrainment Robert Shaughnessy; 24. 'Freetown!': Shakespeare and social flourishing Ewan Fernie; 25. We'll always have Paris: the third household and the 'bed of death' in Romeo and Juliet Nicholas Crawford; 26. The 'serpent of old Nile': Cleopatra and the pragmatics of reported speech Jelena Marelj; 27. 'This insubstantial pageant faded': the drama of semiotic anxiety in The Tempest Lynn Forest-Hill; 28. Shakespeare performances in England 2014 Carol Chillington Rutter; 29. Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles, January–December 2013 James Shaw; The year's contribution to Shakespeare studies: 1. Critical studies Charlotte Scott; 2. Shakespeare in performance Russell Jackson; 3. Editions and textual studies Peter Kirwan.

    3 in stock

    £126.35

  • Cambridge University Press Monuments and Literary Posterity in Early Modern Drama

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisRe-evaluating the relationship between Renaissance dramatists and literary posterity, this book centres on the question of how writers attempted to cope with mortality, with a particular focus on drama and the building of monuments. It will interest scholars and upper-level students of Renaissance drama, memory studies, early modern theatre, and print history.Trade Review'This is at once an admirable study of the paradoxes of memorialization in several important Renaissance dramatic texts, and a significant intervention in the contemporary critical conversation.' Clara Calvo, Universidad de Murcia, SpainTable of ContentsIntroduction: 'raptures of futurity'; 1. 'Let all things end': Marlowe's immortality; 2. Jonson's textual monument; 3. Webster's 'worthyest monument': the problem of posterity in The Duchess of Malfi; 4. 'Mocking life': preemptive commemoration in The Winter's Tale; 5. Fletcher's future: dynasty and collaborative posterity in Henry VIII; Coda: what they hath left us; Select bibliography; Index.

    4 in stock

    £85.50

  • Cambridge University Press Chastity in Early Stuart Literature and Culture

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book explores early modern ideas of chastity and their cultural, political, medical, moral and theological applications, demonstrating how early Stuart thinking on chastity governed even the construction of different literary genres. It will appeal to scholars of early modern literature, theatre, political, medical and cultural history, and gender studies.Table of ContentsIntroduction; 1. Unchastity in Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale, Caroline court performance and theological dispute; 2. Chastity, medical controversy and the theatre of John Ford; 3. Chastity, William Harvey's demonstrations and court ceremony; 4. Marian chastity: Caroline masques and Henrietta Maria's chaste births; 5. Protestant chastity: the language of resistance in Milton's 'A Maske' and A Maske; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

    1 in stock

    £81.00

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare for Freedom

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisShakespeare for Freedom presents a powerful, plausible and political argument for Shakespeare''s meaning and value. It ranges across the breadth of the Shakespeare phenomenon, offering a new interpretation not just of the characters and plays, but also of the part they have played in theatre, criticism, civic culture and politics. Its story includes a glimpse of ''Freetown'' in Romeo and Juliet, which comes to life in the 1769 Stratford Jubilee; the Shakespearean careers of the Leicester Chartist, Cooper, and the Hungarian hero, Kossuth; Hegel''s recognition of Shakespearean freedom as the modern breakthrough; its fatal effects in America; the disgust it inspired in Tolstoy; its rehabilitation by Ted Hughes, and its obscure centrality in the 2012 Olympics. Ultimately, it issues a positive Shakespearean prognosis for freedom as a vital (in both senses), unending struggle. Shakespeare for Freedom shows why Shakespeare has mattered for four hundred years, and why he still matters today.Trade Review'Professor Fernie's exhilarating new book is a timely and rigorous reminder of the political and philosophical potency and daring of both the characters and the plays. A passionate and compelling call to remember Shakespeare's radical credentials. A rich and fascinating tour of historical and contemporary encounters with Shakespeare's words and meanings, which should inspire scholars and theatre-makers alike to treat him once again as a liberating spirit, an existential provocateur and a playwright for our times.' Erica Whyman, Deputy Artistic Director and Director of The Other Place, Royal Shakespeare Company'Ewan Fernie's book rescues freedom from the impoverished, and blatantly ideological, uses to which it is all too often put - and shows how central Shakespeare has been to the history of true modern freedom. A scholar of great honesty, dialectical seriousness, and historical range, Fernie eloquently demonstrates that Shakespeare remains a powerful resource for anyone committed to both individual and collective liberty.' Peter Holbrook, Chair, International Shakespeare Association'Ewan Fernie's writing is, as always, invigorating and original, powerful and thoughtful. In familiar areas, he always has much that is new to say. In unfamiliar ones, he sends us off, eager to read what intrigues him.' Peter Holland, McMeel Family Professor in Shakespeare Studies, University of Notre Dame, Indiana'While the cultural ubiquity of Shakespeare silently reinforces the liberal humanist assumption that these plays have survived because of their inherent or transcendent value, Fernie bravely, like the boy wondering out loud about the emperor's new clothes, dares to ask, 'What good is Shakespeare?' As every barrister knows, never ask a question to which you don't know the answer and fortunately, here, it is not long in coming: 'Shakespeare means freedom'. Fernie's scope is magisterial and panoramic; freedom is assessed in relation to David Garrick's Jubilee of 1769, the 19th-century Hungarian revolutionary Lajos Kossuth, the Leicester Chartist Thomas Cooper, the philosophy of Hegel, the suffragettes, and the Shakespearean influence on Goethe, Freud, John Moriarty and Ted Hughes. … The parting shot of this compelling book maintains the plays 'are politically unstable, always in process. What we do or do not make of them, in contemporary life and politics, is our responsibility'.' The Times Higher Education'Fernie writes clearly and passionately, combining deep learning and theoretical sophistication with an intimate colloquial style. … the book is ultimately able to reanimate a progressive political Shakespeare without relying on easy answers or obscuring the darker undercurrents of Shakespearean freedom.' The Times Literary Supplement'The Trumpian Caesar in Central Park takes his place in a long line of reflections of real-life leaders and despots in Shakespeare productions. Into this controversy wades Ewan Fernie of the University of Birmingham's Shakespeare Institute in Stratford-upon-Avon, with a timely new study, Shakespeare for Freedom: Why the Plays Matter. Over nine chapters, Fernie pays homage to Shakespeare's creations and to the real-life figures who drew inspiration from the Bard in their aspirations and struggles for freedom …' Santa Fe New Mexican'A serious and at times exhilarating attempt to rescue Shakespeare from the sort of obligatory respectfulness that accrues to ubiquity. As with the Beatles, it's often easy to forget the radical nature of Shakespeare's work. Fernie is bent on demonstrating Shakespeare's continuing vitality and usefulness in the world. Fernie sees Shakespeare as 'deep therapy' for the culture, stressing the ever-changing nature of how we relate to them: 'Shakespearean character is always made in interaction, as well as before an audience.' This dynamic nature cuts both ways. So Fernie leaves us with a warning: 'The plays … are not in any simple way utopian. They are politically unstable, always in process. If they are sometimes ethically promising, at others they are undeniably dangerous … What we do or do not make of them, in contemporary life and politics, is our responsibility'.' Arkansas Democrat Gazette'… Fernie has without doubt identified one of the central aspects of Shakespeare's persistent appeal. This is a refreshing addition to Shakespeare studies. … Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' CHOICE'… Shakespeare for Freedom: Why The Plays Matter, by Ewan Fernie, is … [an] update on Jan Kott's classic Shakespeare Our Contemporary. My favorite part is in the chapter titled 'Against Shakespearean Freedom'. The next time some dolt walks out of the theater grumbling, 'Well, that was no Shakespeare', remind that person what Tolstoy had to say on the subject: 'Shakespeare cannot be recognized as a great genius or even as an average author', sniffed the Count, charging Billy Big Boy with the crime of turning the theater, 'this important weapon of progress,' into 'an empty and immoral amusement'. To which we can only append, 'thank goodness'.' Deadline (www.deadline.com)'Ewan Fernie is one of the most original and adventurous Shakespeare scholars at work today … In Shakespeare for Freedom, Fernie assembles a wide-ranging set of reflections for the sake of illuminating his ambitious central claim: 'Shakespeare means freedom. That is why the plays matter, and not just aesthetically but also in terms of the impact they historically have had'. … Shakespeare should be celebrated and studied 'less as heritage to be preserved at all costs than as a stimulus to new life' … If Shakespeare is 'for' freedom, then it is not as an ideal 'for'' or 'against' which to fight. But, as Fernie admirably helps us to see, something whose meaning we struggle to grasp in the contours of our lives together.' Shakespeare Quarterly'To appreciate the importance of Shakespeare for Freedom beyond Shakespearean and literary studies, consider what this journal's title recognizes. Narratives work; they perform multiple works. Shakespeare for Freedom describes how Shakespeare's stories do the narrative work of making freedom an expectation for a full human life … We - scholars, political activists, anybody trying to do the right thing - turn to stories because definitions become progressively less useful as any idea gets bigger, and freedom is among the biggest, up there with dignity, truth, and love … Fernie situates that vision of social freedom on a dual axis of historical breadth, in which Shakespeare's plays act as a stimulus to freedom in different times and places, and textual depth, in which specific characters seek to be free, creating language that evokes their particular freedom. Fernie's far-reaching contribution can provoke scholars from multiple disciplines to think differently.' Narrative Works'In a field dominated by convention, Ewan Fernie's Shakespeare for Freedom: Why the Plays Matter (Cambridge University Press) asks, refreshingly, 'What good is Shakespeare?' - before providing an energetic answer: 'Shakespeare means freedom'. The book uses real and varied examples to politicise a cultural debate. The result is a pertinent Shakespearean canon that is far from neutral.' 'Higher Books of the Year 2017', Times Higher Education'Breaking open the culturally contingent shackles of language and aesthetics, Fernie addresses the value of freedom, and how it is explored and expounded, confounded and conjured by the plays in which 'freedom is richly various'.' Shakespeare Survey'There is something wonderfully disarming about Ewan Fernie's writing and his approach to the subject of Shakespeare for Freedom.…. Possibly the best work Fernie does here [includes] his often brilliant exploration, in two successive chapters, of Hegel's reading of Shakespeare and of their points of connection and divergence on the subject of freedom …' Shakespeare Studies'In this absorbing, passionate book, Ewan Fernie ranges through the histories (and geographies) of Shakespearean appropriation, and offers insightful readings of some of the plays' characters, in an effort to inspire contemporary audiences to revive Shakespeare's liberating political potential now … It is hard not to experience a profound admiration for Fernie's work …' Spenser ReviewTable of Contents1. Reclaiming Shakespearean freedom; 2. Shakespeare means freedom; 3. 'Freetown!' (Romeo and Juliet); 4. Freetown-upon-Avon; 5. Freetown-am-Main; 6. Free artists of their own selves!; 7. Freetown philosopher; 8. Against Shakespearean freedom; 9. The freedom of complete being.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Cambridge University Press William Blake in Context

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisWilliam Blake, poet and artist, is a figure often understood to have ''created his own system''. Combining close readings and detailed analysis of a range of Blake''s work, from lyrical songs to later myth, from writing to visual art, this collection of thirty-eight lively and authoritative essays examines what Blake had in common with his contemporaries, the writers who influenced him, and those he influenced in turn. Chapters from an international team of leading scholars also attend to his wider contexts: material, formal, cultural, and historical, to enrich our understanding of, and engagement with, Blake''s work. Accessibly written, incisive, and informed by original research, William Blake in Context enables readers to appreciate Blake anew, from both within and outside of his own idiom.Trade Review'This volume will be valuable for both new and experienced readers and scholars of Blake … Recommended.' D. D. Schierenbeck, Choice'… William Blake in Context provides a massive amount of information about William Blake with multiple points of departure for further research.' Roger Whitson, European Romantic ReviewTable of ContentsIntroduction Sarah Haggarty; Part I. Life, Works, and Reception: 1. Life Leo Damrosch; 2. Networks Jon Mee; 3. Engraving Mark Crosby; 4. Illuminated books David Worrall; 5. Manuscripts Sarah Haggarty; 6. Book illustration Luisa Calè; 7. Painting Martin Myrone; 8. Early reception Sibylle Erle and Keri Davies; 9. Late reception Jason Whittaker; 10. Editing and editions Morris Eaves; Part II. Form, Genre, and Mode: 11. Comedy Fred Parker; 12. Prophecy Ian Balfour; 13. Rhythm Derek Attridge; 14. Songs Steve Newman; 15. Sound Michael Hurley; 16. Sublimity David Baulch; 17. System, myth, and symbol Tilottama Rajan; Part III. Creative Cross-Currents: 18. The Bible Stephen Prickett; 19. Chaucer, Spenser, and Shakespeare David Fuller; 20. Milton G. A. Rosso; 21. Eighteenth century and romanticism David Duff; 22. Byron Jerome McGann; 23. Pre-Raphaelites and aesthetes Elizabeth Helsinger; 24. Yeats, Eliot, and Auden Edward Larrissy; 25. Whitman, Crane, and the Beats Linda Freedman; Part IV. History, Society, and Culture: 26. Animals Kurt Fosso; 27. Antiquarianism Noah Heringman; 28. Education and childhood Louise Joy; 29. Empiricism Nicholas M. Williams; 30. Life sciences Denise Gigante; 31. London Saree Makdisi; 32. Money Matthew Rowlinson; 33. Moravianism Alexander Regier; 34. Mysticism Laura Quinney; 35. Nationalism and imperialism Julia M. Wright; 36. Sex, sexuality, gender Susan Matthews; 37. War and revolution Andrew Lincoln; 38. (Without) sympathy Steven Goldsmith.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Cambridge University Press Correspondence with Lady Bradshaigh and Lady Echlin 3 Volume Hardback Set Series Numbers 57 The Cambridge Edition of the Correspondence of Samuel Richardson

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisSamuel Richardson (1689â1761), renowned English novelist and master printer, was also a prolific letter writer. The Cambridge Edition of the Correspondence of Samuel Richardson is the first complete edition of his letters. These three volumes contain his correspondence, much of it published for the first time, with two fascinating women: Dorothy, Lady Bradshaigh (1705â85) and her sister Elizabeth, Lady Echlin (1704â82). Lady Bradshaigh was Richardson's most prolific and important correspondent, challenging him about a range of issues, literary and otherwise, including his intentions for Clarissa and Sir Charles Grandison, in an iconoclastic style. Lady Echlin lived in Ireland for much of her life and provided Richardson with information on Irish issues, including the Dublin editions of his novels. The scholarly apparatus in this volume furnishes a wealth of material about these women's lives and their milieu, affording many insights into eighteenth-century English and Irish social and

    5 in stock

    £327.75

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeares Workplace

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisShakespeare was easily the most inventive writer using the English language. His plays give us intricacies of vocabulary and usage that have enriched us immeasurably. This book provides a series of analytical essays on the marginalia relating to the plays. Each of them is a searching and authoritative account, packed with details, of some of the more peculiar conditions under which Shakespeare and his peers composed their playbooks. Among the essays are two completely new contributions. Altogether they reveal fresh details about the input of the playing companies, playhouses, individual players and even their controller, the Revels Office, to the complex fragments that we now have of the Shakespearean world. Gurr examines Shakespeare''s own choice between playwriting and poetry, the requirements of working in a playhouse that wraps itself around the stage, and its impact on the creation of such figures as Henry V, Shylock, Isabella, King Lear and Coriolanus.Trade Review'Andrew Gurr has spent his career illuminating what he calls the 'dark penumbra' around every early modern play … Gurr's approach, which has influenced so much of the field, moves from specific pragmatic or historical questions ('were there three doors for players to enter the stage, or only two? What might the first players have done to cope with the Globe's two large structural pillars on the stage?') to the much broader 'whether the ear or the eye had priority in early modern theatre?' Elizabeth Scott-Baumann, The Times Literary SupplementTable of ContentsList of illustrations; Acknowledgements; Note on the text; 1. Introduction; 2. Henry Carey's peculiar letter; 3. Venues on the verges: London's theatre government between 1594 and 1614 ; 4. Three reluctant patrons and early Shakespeare; 5. The great divide of 1594; 6. The choice between plays and poems; 7. Accommodating the Revels Office; 8. The war of 1614–18: Jacobean absolutism, local authority, and a crisis of overproduction; 9. Metatheatre and the fear of playing; 10. Why was the Globe round?; 11. The general and the caviar: learned audiences in the early theatre; 12. Headless Coriolanus; 13. Rethinking Shylock; 14. Measure for Measure's hoods and masks: the Duke, Isabella, and liberty; 15. The transforming of Henry V; 16. Headgear as a paralinguistic signifier in King Lear; 'The cause is in my will': a bibliography.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Cambridge University Press Edmund Spenser and the EighteenthCentury Book

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisEdmund Spenser''s epic poem The Faerie Queene (15906) occupied an important place in eighteenth-century culture. Spenser influenced almost every major writer of the century, from Alexander Pope to William Wordsworth. What was it like to read Spenser in the eighteenth century? Who made Spenserian books, and how did their owners use and interpret them? The first comprehensive study of all of the eighteenth-century editions of Edmund Spenser addresses these questions through bibliographical analysis, and through examination of the history of the book and of eighteenth-century literature and culture. Within these contexts, Hazel Wilkinson provides new information about the production, contents, texts, and reception of the eighteenth-century editions of Spenser, to illuminate how his cultural presence became so far-reaching. With each chapter structured around a major edition of Spenser''s work, this volume provides a timely addition to arguments about the nature of literary history and the growing cult of great writers of the past.Trade Review'A crucial reminder that literary critics and historians alike have much to learn from the study of bibliography and the history of the book when done, as it is here, with evident care, admirable precision, and infectious enthusiasm for its subject.' N. K. Sugimura, The Library'… a distinguished and learned book … Wilkinson deploys a formidable range of book historian's skills, allied to a sophisticated awareness of eighteenth-century culture … a serious piece of scholarship … that has been skilfully fashioned into a good story.' The Times Literary Supplement'… a tour de force in bibliographical analysis … The discoveries made are too numerous to count … they add considerably to the depth and breadth of our knowledge of Spenser's reception in the eighteenth century.' David Hill Racliffe, The Spenser (www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline)'Wilkinson's book … should inspire more scholars to bridge the gap between cultural history and bibliography … it will be exciting to see how much more we learn about eighteenth-century reprints of poetry because of the new ground broken in Wilkinson's book.' J. P. Ascher, Script & Print'Hazel Wilkinson argues that The Faerie Queene was the original unread classic: the emblematic textual commodity of an age in which book ownership expanded from the domain of aristocrats and scholars to become a bourgeois expression of taste … Wilkinson's project traces that Spenserian affect-at once stately and fanciful, imperially grand and appealingly gothic-across the whole of eighteenth-century English culture, from poetry and fiction to architecture, theater, political propaganda, sculpture, painting, and landscape gardening.' Catherine Nicholson, New York Review of BooksTable of ContentsList of abbreviations; List of illustrations; Acknowledgments; Introduction. 'The Wits have sent for the Book': (non-)reading, and Spenserian books before 1700; 1. Spenser the Whig: John Hughes's Clubbable Edition, 1715; 2. Miscellaneous Spenser: verse miscellanies and miscellaneous culture, 1716–50; 3. Spenser illustrated: Thomas Birch's 1751 Edition; 4. Spenser annotated: two scholarly editions, 1758–9; 5. Spenser and the public domain: the Scottish Publishers' series, 1778–95; Appendix A: checklist of the eighteenth-century editions of Edmund Spenser; List of works cited; Index.

    1 in stock

    £85.50

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare Beyond Doubt

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisDid Shakespeare write Shakespeare? The authorship question has been much treated in works of fiction, film and television, provoking interest all over the world. Sceptics have proposed many candidates as the author of Shakespeare''s works, including Francis Bacon, Christopher Marlowe and Edward De Vere, the seventeenth Earl of Oxford. But why and how did the authorship question arise and what does surviving evidence offer in answer to it? This authoritative, accessible and frequently entertaining book sets the debate in its historical context and provides an account of its main protagonists and their theories. Presenting the authorship of Shakespeare''s works in relation to historiography, psychology and literary theory, twenty-three distinguished scholars reposition and develop the discussion. The book explores the issues in the light of biographical, textual and bibliographical evidence to bring fresh perspectives to an intriguing cultural phenomenon.Trade Review'Until now no book has provided the comprehensive evidence necessary to satisfy those 'Reasonable Doubters'.' James Shapiro, Columbia University, and author of Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?'The Shakespeare debate has never been hotter.' London Evening Standard'This book helpfully pulls together irrefutable evidence that Shakespeare really was Shakespeare.' New Statesman'Well conceived and energetic.' The Times Literary Supplement'… salutary …' Standpoint'Shakespeare Beyond Doubt shows, once more, that the fickle authorship controversy still exists not because there is no evidence that Shakespeare was Shakespeare but because anti-Shakespeareans refuse to acknowledge it and prefer the creative route of constructing an imaginary and speculative truth. History does not work like that. It is not a Hollywood movie.' The Huffington Post'Thorough, rigorous, scholarly, and a lot of fun.' History Today'The range of evidence, from dialect, through manuscript analysis, to stagecraft, makes it a wonderfully rounded introduction to the period, as well as to the playwright.' Judith Flanders, The Times Literary Supplement'This excellent collection, edited by Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells, assumes that it is possible to engage with the doubters in an honest, honourable, and constructive dialogue.' Quarto'… a most useful volume …' The New Criterion'The achievement here is substantial. Edmondson and Wells have curated an impressive collection that leaves few stones unturned and sets out a weighty case that defies easy rebuttal.' Cahiers Élisabéthains'All the essays are brief and accessible. Often summarising their own groundbreaking research, the contributors accomplish a two-fold task: they expose the feebleness of the anti-Shakespeareans' contentions and simultaneously provide accounts of the most recent developments in various branches of Shakespeare studies, whose scope and interest go well beyond the authorship question.' Laura Talarico, Memoria di Shakespeare: A Journal of Shakespearean Studies'The volume's distinguished editors, Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells, have assembled a tight volume that both addresses the questions at the heart of the so-called authorship controversy and discusses the phenomenon in critically sophisticated ways.' Curtis Perry, SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900Table of ContentsGeneral introduction Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells; Part I. Sceptics: Introduction to Part One Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells; 1. The unreadable Delia Bacon Graham Holderness; 2. The case for Bacon Alan Stewart; 3. The case for Marlowe Charles Nicholl; 4. The life and theatrical interests of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford Alan H. Nelson; 5. The unusual suspects Matt Kubus; Part II. Shakespeare as Author: Introduction to Part Two Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells; 6. Theorizing Shakespeare's authorship Andrew Hadfield; 7. Allusions to Shakespeare to 1642 Stanley Wells; 8. Shakespeare as collaborator John Jowett; 9. Authorship and the evidence of stylometrics MacDonald P. Jackson; 10. What does textual evidence reveal about the author? James Mardock and Eric Rasmussen; 11. Shakespeare and Warwickshire David Kathman; 12. Shakespeare and school Carol Chillington Rutter; 13. Shakespeare tells lies Barbara Everett; Part III. A Cultural Phenomenon: Did Shakespeare Write Shakespeare?: Introduction to Part Three Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells; 14. 'This palpable device': authorship and conspiracy in Shakespeare's life Kathleen E. McLuskie; 15. Amateurs and professionals: regendering Bacon Andrew Murphy; 16. Fictional treatments of Shakespeare's authorship Paul Franssen; 17. The declaration of reasonable doubt Stuart Hampton-Reeves; 18. 'There won't be puppets, will there?': 'Heroic' authorship and the cultural politics of Anonymous Douglas M. Lanier; 19. 'The Shakespeare establishment' and the Shakespeare authorship discussion Paul Edmondson; Afterword James Shapiro; A selected reading list Hardy M. Cook.

    15 in stock

    £22.99

  • Cambridge University Press The New Milton Criticism

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe New Milton Criticism seeks to emphasize ambivalence and discontinuity in Milton''s work and interrogate the assumptions and certainties in previous Milton scholarship. Contributors to the volume move Milton''s open-ended poetics to the centre of Milton studies by showing how analysing irresolvable questions religious, philosophical and literary critical transforms interpretation and enriches appreciation of his work. The New Milton Criticism encourages scholars to embrace uncertainties in his writings rather than attempt to explain them away. Twelve critics from a range of countries, approaches and methodologies explore these questions in these new readings of Paradise Lost and other works. Sure to become a focus of debate and controversy in the field, this volume is a truly original contribution to early modern studies.Trade Review'A collection of largely embracing essays, studded with bright little insights into particular passages, and the 'against-the-grain' feel of (almost) the entire book will surely have warmed the hearts of its contributors.' William Poole, Milton QuarterlyTable of ContentsIntroduction: paradigms lost, paradigms found: the new Milton criticism Peter C. Herman and Elizabeth Sauer; Part I. Theodicies: 1. Milton's fetters, or, why Eden is better than heaven Richard Strier; 2. 'Whose fault, whose but his own?': Paradise Lost, contributory negligence, and the problem of cause Peter C. Herman; 3. The political theology of Milton's heaven John Rogers; 4. Meanwhile: (un)making time in Paradise Lost Judith Scherer Herz; 5. The gnostic Milton: salvation and divine similitude in Paradise Regained Michael Bryson; 6. The discontents with the drama of regeneration Elizabeth Sauer; Part II. Critical Receptions: 7. Against fescues and ferulas: personal affront and individual liberty in Milton's prose Christopher D'Addario; 8. Disruptive partners: Milton and seventeenth-century women writers Shannon Miller; 9. Eve and the ironic theodicy of the new Milton criticism Thomas Festa; 10. Denis Saurat, and the old new Milton criticism Jeffrey Shoulson; 11. The poverty of context: Cambridge School history and the new Milton criticism William Kolbrener; 12. Afterword Joseph Wittreich; Index.

    5 in stock

    £24.76

  • Cambridge University Press Restoration Plays and Players

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisProviding an account of how Restoration plays were written, performed, printed, adapted and revived for modern audiences, this accessible and engaging book is of great interest to undergraduate and non-specialist readers of theatre studies, Restoration drama and English literature.Trade Review'In addition to discussions of a generous selection of plays, Roberts provides students with succinct, informative and well-paced accounts of the personnel and material circumstances of Restoration Theatre, including the actors, the managers, the theatres and the growth of print culture. There is much to admire here.' Derek Hughes, University of Aberdeen'[Roberts'] theatrical primer will be a welcome addition to any bookshelf for teachers of later seventeenth-century drama. The book's successive chapters cover almost every imaginable topic. … Roberts is particularly good at bridging his close readings of individual plays with the political, social, financial, commercial, managerial, and professional worlds these works circulated in, were shaped by, and shaped themselves.' Andrew Benjamin Bricker, Renaissance and ReformationTable of ContentsList of figures; Preface; 1. Regime change theatre; 2. The life cycle of the Restoration play; 3. Playwrights; 4. Companies; 5. Actors; 6. Playhouses; 7. Audiences and critics; 8. Texts and publishers; 9. Revivals and adaptations; Further reading; Timeline; Index.

    3 in stock

    £19.99

  • Cambridge University Press Apocalypse and AntiCatholicism in SeventeenthCentury English Drama

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book examines the many and varied uses of apocalyptic and anti-Catholic language in seventeenth-century English drama. Adrian Streete argues that this rhetoric is not simply an expression of religious bigotry, nor is it only deployed at moments of political crisis. Rather, it is an adaptable and flexible language with national and international implications. It offers a measure of cohesion and order in a volatile century. By rethinking the relationship between theatre, theology and polemic, Streete shows how playwrights exploited these connections for a diverse range of political ends. Chapters focus on playwrights like Marston, Middleton, Massinger, Shirley, Dryden and Lee, and on a range of topics including imperialism, reason of state, commerce, prostitution, resistance, prophecy, church reform and liberty. Drawing on important recent work in religious and political history, this is a major re-interpretation of how and why religious ideas are debated in the early modern theatreTrade Review'Its comprehensiveness is staggering: en route to close reading particular plays, Streete provides numerous examples and quotations from a variety of contemporaneous plays, poems, speeches, and sermons, making it the most crossgeneric monograph this reader has seen and enjoyed. Streete's sensitivity and command of early modern culture is unparalleled … Streete's ability to trace ripples of fear through his encyclopaedic grasp of the period's publishing history makes his argument virtually airtight.' Kyle Sebastian Vitale, The Review of English Studies'A finely detailed and instructive study of how political and religious discourses are reconfigured in the language, plot and personation of drama … an excellent resource that will propel further scholarly interest.' Daniel Cattell, The Seventeenth Century'… this is a major work of early modern scholarship and it will prove to be invaluable to anyone working in the fields of religious controversy, religio-political drama, the wider religious and political culture of seventeenth-century Britain, or Protestant Britain's relationship with its Protestant and Roman Catholic neighbours and with the cross-denominational application of apocalyptic thought.' Paul Quinn, British Catholic History'Apocalypse and Anti-Catholicism makes a good companion piece to the same author's earlier study of Protestantism and Drama in Early Modern England (Cambridge, 2009). Streete has carved out a special niche for himself in this field.' R. C. Richardson, Literature & HistoryTable of ContentsIntroduction; 1. Anti-Christ and the whore in early modern England – cultures of interpretation; 2. 'What news from Babylon?' Marston's The Dutch Courtesan (1605) and the Spanish peace; 3. 'Mere idolatry'? Resistance and Rome in Middleton's The Lady's Tragedy (1610); 4. 'Occultus Rex': Caroline politics and imperial kingship in Massinger's Believe as You List (1631); 5. 'Purple Pride' – war, episcopacy, and Shirley's The Cardinal (1641); 6. 'Rebellion Orthodox' – arbitrary rule and liberty in Dryden and Lee's The Duke of Guise (1682); Conclusion.

    1 in stock

    £87.39

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare and Emotion

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisShakespeare and Emotion devotes sustained attention to the emotions as a novel way of exploring Shakespeare''s works in their original contexts. A variety of disciplinary approaches drawn from literary, theatrical, historical, cultural and film studies brings the recent upsurge of interest in affect into conversation with some of the most urgent debates in Shakespeare studies. The volume provides both a comprehensive account of the current state of scholarship and a speculative forum for new research. Its chapters outline some important contexts for understanding Shakespeare''s creativity through an emotional lens from religion, rhetoric, and medicine, to language, acting and Bollywood and offer a range of case studies which reveal particular emotions at work. Considering emotional and passionate experience as an animating and sometimes alienating force within the plays and poems, the volume highlights the continuing importance of Shakespeare today: for our sense of who we are and whTable of ContentsIntroduction Katharine A. Craik; Part I. Contexts: 1. Rhetoric: Titus Andronicus, Julius Caesar Neil Rhodes; 2. Medicine: King Lear, Macbeth, The Tempest Elizabeth D. Harvey; 3. Religion: Henry VI, Henry IV, Henry V Elizabeth Williamson; 4. Character: As You Like It, A Midsummer Night's Dream Robert White; 5. Inheritance and Innovation: Richard III, 3 Henry VI, Richard II, The Merchant of Venice Christopher Tilmouth; 6. Communities: Julius Caesar Gail Paster; 7. Audiences: Much Ado about Nothing, Measure for Measure Tanya Pollard; 8. Acting: The Taming of the Shrew, Coriolanus Bridget Escolme; 9. Bollywood: Macbeth, Othello Melissa Croteau; 10. Language: Macbeth, King Lear Philip Davis; 11. Emotional Labour: Hamlet Ross Knecht; 12. Passionate Shakespeare Peter Holbrook; Part II. Emotions: 13. Fear: Macbeth, Othello Toria Johnson; 14. Grief: Hamlet Erin Sullivan; 15. Sympathy: Titus Andronicus, The Comedy of Errors, Romeo and Juliet Richard Meek; 16. Shame: A Lover's Complaint, Coriolanus, The Rape of Lucrece Lesel Dawson; 17. Anger: Titus Andronicus, Timon of Athens Gwynne Kennedy; 18. Pride: Coriolanus Indira Ghose; 19. Happiness: Othello, I Henry IV, Antony and Cleopatra Richard Strier; 20. Love: Sonnets, As You Like It, A Midsummer Night's Dream David Schalkwyk; 21. Nostalgia: Richard II, Henry V, Henry VI Hester Lees-Jeffries; 22. Wonder: Pericles, The Tempest, 'The Phoenix and the Turtle' Tom Bishop; 23. Confusion: Cymbeline, Merchant of Venice, The Winter's Tale Timothy M. Harrison.

    3 in stock

    £78.84

  • Cambridge University Press Imagining Shakespeares Wife

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhat has been the appeal of Anne Hathaway, both globally and temporally, over the past four hundred years? Why does she continue to be reinterpreted and reshaped? Imagining Shakespeare''s Wife examines representations of Hathaway, from the earliest depictions and details in the eighteenth century, to contemporary portrayals in theatre, biographies and novels. Residing in the nexus between Shakespeare''s life and works, Hathaway has been constructed to explain the women in the plays but also composed from the material in the plays. Presenting the very first cultural history of Hathaway, Katherine Scheil offers a richly original study that uncovers how the material circumstances of history affect the later reconstruction of lives.Trade Review'[It is to] Scheil's credit that while she presents and discusses these myriad Annes, she always keeps the reader aware of the true Anne, the one who we cannot know, who is impossible to know, but who deserves to be acknowledged simply because she is human. Highly recommend.' The Fish Shelf (www.fishshelf.blogspot.co.uk)'For over two centuries, scholars and biographers have sought to pluck out the heart of the mystery of Anne Hathaway and her marriage to William Shakespeare. As Katherine West Scheil brilliantly shows in these pages, Anne Hathaway has variously been depicted as supportive, adulterous, independent, doting, and predatory (portrayals that reveal much about the critical tradition and the obsessions of those who have long maligned her). A fascinating and timely work of cultural history.' James Shapiro, author of 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare'Loyal wife and dutiful housekeeper? Youthful folly and life-long burden? Muse or mischief maker? This comprehensive study fascinatingly charts the fluctuating attempts to flesh out the life records of Shakespeare's wife and the story of their lives both together and apart.' Sir Stanley Wells, CBE, Honorary President, The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust'… there is a double pleasure to Scheil's generously open book that is keenly aware of the limitations of academic writing … It is not only a history of Anne Hathaway and Shakespearean scholarship, but also the change in cultural attitudes and ways of reading since Hathaway's death.' Edward Behrens, Globe Magazine'Drawing on old biographies, novels and plays, Katherine West Scheil documents how for more than 200 years Anne Hathaway has been used as a keyhole through which to spy on the playwright as husband and lover. Her review of these varying interpretations demonstrate that Anne has been distorted to fit the Shakespeare each writer or era wanted to see.' Alex Colville, The Spectator'… fairly easy to read and contains a lot of great analysis about the ways Anne Hathaway has been interpreted throughout history. … if you want to know more about the Bard and his wife, this is a book to read.' Inside the Mind of a Bibliophile Blog (allsortsofbooks.blogspot.com)'As Scheil observes, there is no progress from misogyny to idealization in literary treatments of the literary marriage, but it has proved surprisingly rich as an inspiration.' Lois Potter, The Times Literary Supplement'Scheil's careful combing of literature for fictionalized Hathaways offers a rich index for graduate students and advanced scholars alike.' Horacio Sierra, Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary JournalTable of ContentsPreface; 1. Origins; 2. Forging the Shakespeare marriage: Anne Hathaway in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; 3. The legacy of Anne Hathaway's cottage; Interlude: fact and fiction; 4. 'Fit to marry': early imaginary Annes; 5. Post-war imaginary Annes; 6. Anne Hathaway for a female audience; Conclusion.

    4 in stock

    £65.86

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare Survey 70

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe seventieth volume in the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production. The articles are drawn from the World Shakespeare Congress, held 400 years after Shakespeare''s death, in July/August 2016 in Stratford-upon-Avon and London. The theme is ''Creating Shakespeare''.Table of Contents1. 'Think when we talk of horses …' Gregory Doran; 2. Adrian Lester in dialogue with Ayanna Thompson; 3. Shakespeare and the novel: a conversation Howard Jacobson and Adrian Poole; 4. 'Music still': understanding and reconstructing Shakespeare's use of musical underscore Claire van Kampen; Part I. Shakespeare: Biography and Celebration: 5. Remembering and forgetting in 1916: Israel Gollancz, the Shakespeare tercentenary and the National Theatre Gordon McMullan; 6. Four centuries of centenaries: Stratford-upon-Avon Michael Dobson; 7. Writing and re-writing Shakespeare's life: a roundtable discussion with Margreta de Grazia, Katherine Scheil, James Shapiro, and Stanley Wells Paul Edmondson; 8. The merchant in Venice: re-creating Shakespeare in the Ghetto Shaul Bassi; 9. Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice in and beyond the Ghetto Carol Chillington Rutter; Part II. Shakespeare and Textual Studies: 10. What the quills can tell: the case of John Fletcher and Philip Massinger's Love's Cure José A. Pérez Díez; 11. What if Greg and Werstine had examined early Modern Spanish Dramatic Manuscripts Jesús Tronch; 12. Exit manuscripts: the archive of theatre and the archive of print John Jowett; 13. 'Sblood! Hamlet's oaths and the editing of Shakespeare's plays Lucy Munro; 14. Antihonorificabilitudinitatibus: Love's Labour's Lost and unteachable words Adam Zucker; 15. Shakespeare and who? Aeschylus, Edward III, and Thomas Kyd Gary Taylor, John V. Nance and Keegan Cooper; 16. Authorial attribution and Shakespearean variety: genre, form and chronology Hugh Craig; Part lll. Shakespeare and Early Modern Contexts: 17. 'My mother's maids, when they did sew and spin': staging sewing, telling tales Hester Lees-Jeffries; 18. Why prospero drowned his books, and other Catholic folklore Helen Cooper; 19. Why did the English stage take boys for actresses? Pamela Allen Brown; 20. Acting amiss: towards a history of actorly craft and playhouse judgement Simon Smith 21. 'What imports this song?': spontaneous singers and spaces of meaning in Shakespeare Elisabeth Lutteman; 22. Shakespeare's depriving particles Ruth Morse; 23. Shakespeare's comedy of upright status: standing bears and fallen humans Laurie Shannon; 24. 'Worth the name of a Christian'?: the parabolic economy of Two Gentlemen of Verona Margaret Tudeau-Clayton; 25. 'Titus, unkind': Shakespeare's revision of Vergil's Aeneas in Titus Andronicus Megan Allen; 26. 'Cut him out in little stars': Juliet's cute classicism Julia Reinhard Lupton; 27. The will of Caesar: choice-making, the death of the Roman Republic, and the development of Shakespearean character Katharine Eisaman Maus; 28. 'As for that light hobby-horse, my sister': Shakespearean influences and popular discourses in Blurt, Master Constable Natália Pikli; 29. Messianic ugliness in A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Winter's Tale Naomi Baker; 30. Shakespeare performances in England, 2016 Stephen Purcell; 31. Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles, January-December 2015 James Shaw; Part IV. The Year's Contribution to Shakespeare Studies: 1. Critical studies reviewed by Charlotte Scott; 2. The Cambridge Guide to the Worlds of Shakespeare reviewed by Russell Jackson; 3. Shakespeare in performance reviewed by Russell Jackson; 4. Editions and textual studies reviewed by Peter Kirwan; Abstracts.

    2 in stock

    £99.75

  • Cambridge University Press Gathering Force Early Modern British Literature in Transition 15571623 Volume 1

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisDuring the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, England grew from a marginal to a major European power, established overseas settlements, and negotiated the Protestant Reformation. The population burgeoned and became increasingly urban. England also saw the meteoric rise of commercial theatre in London, the creation of a vigorous market for printed texts, and the emergence of writing as a viable profession. Literacy rates exploded, and an increasingly diverse audience encountered a profusion of new textual forms. Media, and literary culture, transformed on a scale that would not happen again until television and the Internet. The twenty innovative contributions in Gathering Force: Early Modern Literature in Transition, 15571623 trace ways that five different genres both spurred and responded to change. Chapters explore different facets of lyric poetry, romance, commercial drama, masques and pageants, and non-narrative prose. Exciting and accessible, this volume illuminates the dyTrade Review'… lapses are rare in this valuable book … we hope that it encourages publishers, often dubious about collections, to publish them-and personnel committees to celebrate the achievements of their editors.' Heather Dubrow, Renaissance QuarterlyTable of ContentsPart I. Generic Transitions: 1. The English sonnet: cycles and recycling Catherine Bates; 2. Romance: traditions and innovations Kenneth Borris; 3. Drama: forming an audience Lois Potter; 4. Pageants, masques, and entertainments: old rituals, new forms Lauren Shohet; 5. Arts of rhetoric: antique and modern Jenny C. Mann; Part II. Literature and Ideological Transformation: 6. Lyric and spiritualism: John Donne's 'The Ecstasy' Douglas Trevor; 7. Romance and the boundaries of genre and gender Andrew Hadfield; 8. Drama and globalization in early modern England Daniel J. Vitkus; 9. The court masque: art and politics Peter Holbrook; 10. Prose, science, and scripture: Francis Bacon's sacred texts Katherine Bootle Attié; Part III. Literature and Cultural Transformation: 11. Lyric and scientific epistemologies: Bacon and Donne Liza Blake; 12. Romance and the early modern cultures of the book Sarah Wall-Randell; 13. Drama and commodity culture in Marlowe's Doctor Faustus Bradley D. Ryner; 14. Pageantry and politics: the anxiety of arrival Tom Bishop; 15. Prose and the public sphere David Colclough; Part IV. Literature and Local Transformation: 16. 'Hard to meter well': psalms and early modern English poetry Lucía Martínez Valdivia; 17. Romance, magical space, and Wroth's Urania Sheila Cavanagh; 18. Drama and the playhouse Lucy Munro; 19. Greek tragedy on the university stage: Buchanan and Euripides Hannah Crawforth and Lucy Jackson; 20. Prose and the pulpit Lori Anne Ferrell.

    4 in stock

    £105.45

  • Cambridge University Press Political Turmoil Early Modern British Literature in Transition 16231660 Volume 2

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe early modern period in Britain was defined by tremendous upheaval - the upending of monarchy, the unsettling of church doctrine, and the pursuit of a new method of inquiry based on an inductive experimental model. Political Turmoil: Early Modern Literature in Transition, 16231660 offers an innovative and ambitious re-appraisal of seventeenth-century British literature and history. Each of the contributors attempts to address the ''how'' and ''why'' of aesthetic change by focusing on political and cultural transformations. Instead of forging a grand narrative of continuity, the contributors attempt to piece together the often complex web of factors and events that contributed to developments in literary form and matter - as well as the social and religious changes that literature sometimes helped to occasion. These twenty chapters, reading across traditional periodization, demonstrate that early modern literary works - when they were conceived, as they were created, and after they cTrade Review'Political Turmoil is remarkable for its engagement with multiple discourses. Its thoughtfully arranged chapters … are uniformly well-written, occasionally revelatory, and very much in conversation across the volume. This book will prove accessible to advanced undergraduates, yet useful to both generalists and experts in early modern literature. It should be on the shelves of every academic library and considered for any graduate or advanced undergraduate course in early modern literature.' Wendy Furman-Adams, Modern PhilologyTable of ContentsIntroduction: turmoil, political and otherwise; Part I. Generic Transitions: 1. Writing the self Sharon Cadman Seelig; 2. Changing places and transitional spaces: plays, masques, and performances Julie Sanders; 3. Erotic and devotional verse Stephen Guy-Bray; 4. Kingdoms of the mind: epic forms, fragments, and translations Anthony Welch; 5. 'Useful' books and mobile poems Randall Ingram; Part II. Literature and Ideological Transformation: 6. The symbolism of anti-Calvinism John Rumrich; 7. Royalist writing and the trope of prison Jerome de Groot; 8. Shakespearean constitutions: literary culture and republicanism Nicholas McDowell; 9. 'The best of texts': the death of Charles I Stephen B. Dobranski; 10. A British Caesar? Representations of Oliver Cromwell Laura Knoppers; Part III. Literature and Cultural Transformation: 11. An 'Amsterdamnified' public sphere: English newsbooks, pamphleteering and polemic in European context Jason Peacey; 12. Affected and disaffected alike: women, print, and the problem of women's literary history Lara Dodds; 13. Imagining the scientific revolution in England Katherine Calloway; 14. Revitalizing nation and mind: the failed promise of seventeenth-century educational reform Todd Butler; 15. The end of friendship Gregory Chaplin; Part IV. Literature and Local Transformation: 16. Country matters Verena Olejniczak Lobsien; 17. Life during wartime: the writing of civil war London Christopher D'Addario; 18. Nations in question: writing Scotland and Ireland James Loxley; 19. England, neo-Latin, and the continental journey Estelle Haan; 20. Global commerce and an emergent 'empire of trade' Stephen Deng.

    5 in stock

    £105.45

  • Cambridge University Press Immortality and the Body in the Age of Milton

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisSeventeenth-century England teemed with speculation on body and its relation to soul. Descartes'' dualist certainty was countered by materialisms, whether mechanist or vitalist. The most important and distinctive literary reflection of this ferment is John Milton''s vitalist or animist materialism, which underwrites the cosmic worlds of Paradise Lost. In a time of philosophical upheaval and innovation, Milton and an unusual collection of fascinating and diverse contemporary writers, including John Donne, Margaret Cavendish, John Bunyan, and Hester Pulter, addressed the potency of the body, now viewed not as a drag on the immaterial soul or a site of embarrassment but as an occasion for heroic striving and a vehicle of transcendence. This collection addresses embodiment in relation to the immortal longings of early modern writers, variously abetted by the new science, print culture, and the Copernican upheaval of the heavens.Table of ContentsPart I. 1. The enfolded sublime of incarnate immortality Gardner Campbell; 2. Milton's 'Lycidas', or Edward King's two bodies James Nohrnberg; Part II. 3. Narcissus in the boudoir: Aretino's Petrarchan postures Gordon Braden; 4. Carnality into creativity: sublimation in John Bunyan's 'Apology' to The Pilgrim's Progress Vera Camden; 5. Milton's beautiful body Gregory Chaplin; 6. The fortunate, unfortunate fall and two varieties of immortality in Paradise Lost Stephen M. Fallon; Part III. 7. The miracle in Francis Bacon's natural philosophy Gregory Foran; 8. Flesh made word: pneumatology and Miltonic textuality John Rumrich; 9. Milton beyond iconoclasm David A. Harper; Part IV. 10. Hester Pulter's brave new worlds Louisa Hall; 11. Death-weddings or living books: Cavendish rewriting Donne Dustin Stewart; 12. Paradise Lost and the creation of Mormon theology John Rogers.

    15 in stock

    £85.50

  • Cambridge University Press Miniature and the English Imagination

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisExamining the phenomenon of miniaturization in material culture, literature and theories of cognition, this study examines the appeal and function of the small in the period from 1660 to 1765. Examining two kinds of miniatures - real and imaginary - it provides a rethinking of major and minor writers.Trade Review'… the book's analysis of small things within the broader contexts of the early eighteenth century is invaluable … the book reinforces that although the objects it discusses were physically small, they were rich with meaning, history, and interpretative potential. As such, Rabb's sophisticated interrogation of the relationship between small things and big ideas will be of great use to anyone doing work on objects (and their representations) which, due to aesthetic hierarchies and cultural regimes of value, have long been deemed not only small, but insignificant.' Freya Gowrley, The Review of English Studies'This is a deft, incisive book that produces rich new interpretations of texts, and I recommend it …' Nicholas Seager, MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEWTable of Contents1. Introduction to an age of small-scale; 2. Swift and miniature: Cogito ergo Gulliver; 3. Lilliput recalibrated: Johnson and others; 4. Toying with thought: Pope, Gay, Dodsley; 5. War in miniature: models, maps, medals, and Sterne's Tristram Shandy; 6. Science and miniature: animal rationis capax and homo depictor; Coda: 'the last extreme of littleness': miniature and the postmodern imagination; Bibliography.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Cambridge University Press Pronouncing Shakespeare

    20 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow did Shakespeare''s plays sound when they were originally performed? How can we know, and could the original pronunciation ever be recreated? For three days, Shakespeare''s Globe presented a production of Romeo and Juliet in original, Shakespearian pronunciation. In an unusual blend of autobiography, narrative, and academic content, David Crystal recounts the unique nature of the experience. He begins by discussing the Globe Theatre''s approach to ''original practices'', which had dealt with all aspects of Elizabethan stagecraft - except pronunciation. A large section is devoted to the nature of the Early Modern English sound system. There are reports of how the actors coped with the task of learning the pronunciation, how it affected their performances and how the audiences reacted. In this new edition, he reflects on the development of the original pronunciation movement across the world, since the Globe''s experiment.Table of ContentsPrologue Tim Carroll; 1. Idea; 2. Proposal; 3. Evidence; 4. Rehearsal; 5. Performance; 6. Consequences; Epilogue; Afterlife.

    20 in stock

    £17.99

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare Survey 71

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe 71st in the annual series of volumes devoted to Shakespeare study and production. The articles, like those of volume 70, are drawn from the World Shakespeare Congress, held 400 years after Shakespeare''s death, in July/August 2016 in Stratford-upon-Avon and London. The theme is ''Re-Creating Shakespeare''.Table of ContentsList of Illustrations; Part I. Shakespeare in Performance – Africa and Asia: 1. Shakespeare's transcolonial solidarities in the global south Sandra Young; 2. Shakespeare's creolised voices Ashish Beesoondial; 3. 'Accents yet unknown': Haider and Hamlet in Kashmir Pompa Banerjee; 4. The forests of silence: global Shakespeare in the Philippines, the Philippines in global Shakespeare Judy Celine Ick; 5. Arab Shakespeares at the World Shakespeare Congress Katherine Hennessey and Margaret Litvin; 6. The dual tradition of bardolatry in China Hao Liu; 7. A catalyst for theatrical reinvention: contemporary travelling companies at the Tokyo Globe Theatre Michiko Suematsu; Part II. Shakespeare in Performance – The Americas: 8. 'Both alike in dignity': Havana and Mexico City Play Romeo and Juliet Alfredo Michel Modenessi; 9. Cuban improvisations: reverse colonization via Shakespeare Donna Woodford-Gormley; 10. Mixing memory with desire: staging Hamlet Q1 Andrew James Hartley; 11. Shakespeare, race, and 'other' Englishes: the Q Brothers' Othello: the remix Carla Della Gatta; Part III. Shakespeare in Performance – Europe: 12. 'Mingled yarn': The Merchant of Venice East of Berlin and the legacy of 'Eastern Europe' Boika Sokolova; 13. Ariel's groans, or, performing protean gender on the Bulgarian post-communist stage Kirilka Stavreva; 14. Dressing the history 'boys': Harry's masks, Falstaff's underpants Carol Chillington Rutter; 15. Shopping for the archives: fashioning a costume collection Kate Dorney; 16. Pastiche or archetype? The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse and the project of theatrical reconstruction Holger Schott Syme; 17. Evolutionary naturalism and ecology in Shakespearian performance (with scene from King John) Randall Martin; Part IV. Shakespeare and Other Art Forms: 18. Of dance and disarticulation: Juliet dead and alive Joseph Campana; 19. Titania's dream: three choreographic Midsummer Night's Dreams of the twentieth century Iris Julia Bührle; 20. Shakespeare on screens: close watching, close listening Peter Holland; 21. From table books to Tumblr: recollecting the microgenres of the early modern stage in social media Cyrus Mulready; 22. Unlearning Shakespeare studies: speculative criticism and the place of fan activism Louise Geddes; 23. Titus Andronicus and trapdoors at the Rose and Newington Butts Mark Hutchings; 24. Shakespeare's bewitching line Robert Stagg; 25. At the sign of the angel: the influence of Andrew Wise on Shakespeare in print Amy Lidster; 26. Shakespeare and Hardy: the tragi-comic nexus Thomas McAlindon; 27. Queer Iago: a brief history Jonathan Crewe; 28. Global Shakespeare and the censor: adaptation, context and Shakespeare Must Die, a Thai film adaptation of Macbeth Mark Thornton Burnett; 29. Hathaway farm: commemorating Warwickshire Will between the wars Katherine Scheil; 30. Shakespeare performances in England, 2017 Stephen Purcell; 31. Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles, January-December 2016 James Shaw; 32. The year's contribution to Shakespeare studies; 1. Critical studies reviewed by Charlotte Scott; 2. Shakespeare in performance reviewed by Russell Jackson; 3. Editions and textual studies reviewed by Peter Kirwan; Abstracts; Index.

    10 in stock

    £99.75

  • Cambridge University Press The Cambridge History of the Gothic Volume 1 Gothic in the Long Eighteenth Century

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis first volume of The Cambridge History of the Gothic provides a rigorous account of the Gothic in Western civilisation, from the Goths'' sacking of Rome in 410 AD through to its manifestations in British and European culture of the long eighteenth century. Written by international cast of leading scholars, the chapters explore the interdisciplinary nature of the Gothic in the fields of history, literature, architecture and fine art. As much a cultural history of Gothic as an account of the ways in which the Gothic has participated within a number of formative historical events across time, the volume offers fresh perspectives on familiar themes while also drawing new critical attention to a range of hitherto overlooked concerns. From writers such as Horace Walpole and Ann Radcliffe to eighteenth-century politics and theatre, the volume provides a thorough and engaging overview of early Gothic culture in Britain and beyond.Table of ContentsIntroduction: The Gothic in/and History Dale Townshend, Angela Wright and Catherine Spooner 1. The Goths in Ancient History David M. Gwynn; 2. The Term 'Gothic' in the Long Eighteenth Century, 1680‒1800 Nick Groom; 3. The Literary Gothic Before Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto Dale Townshend; 4. Gothic Revival Architecture Before Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill Peter N. Lindfield; 5. Horace Walpole and the Gothic Stephen Clarke; 6. Shakespeare's Gothic Transmigrations Anne Williams; 7. Reassessing the Gothic / Classical Relationship James Uden; 8. 'A World of Bad Spirits': The Terrors of Eighteenth-Century Empire Ruth Scobie; 9. In Their Blood: The Eighteenth-Century Gothic Stage Paula R. Backscheider; 10. Domestic Gothic Writing after Horace Walpole and before Ann Radcliffe Deborah Russell; 11. Early British Gothic and the American Revolution James Watt; 12. Gothic and the French Revolution, 1789–1804 Fanny Lacôte; 13. The Aesthetics of Terror and Horror: A Genealogy Eric Parisot; 14. Ann Radcliffe and Matthew Lewis Angela Wright; 15. The Gothic Novel Beyond Radcliffe and Lewis Yael Shapira; 16. Oriental Gothic: Imperial-Commercial Nightmares from the Eighteenth Century to the Romantic Period Diego Saglia; 17. The German 'School' of Horrors: A Pharmacology of the Gothic Barry Murnane; 18. Gothic and the History of Sexuality Jolene Zigarovich; 19. Gothic Art and Gothic Culture in the Romantic Era Martin Myrone; 20. Time in the Gothic Robert Miles; Select Bibliography

    3 in stock

    £126.35

  • Cambridge University Press Women and the Circulation of Texts in Renaissance Italy

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisDuring the Italian Renaissance, laywomen and nuns could take part in every stage of the circulation of texts of many kinds, old and new, learned and popular. This first in-depth and integrated analysis of Italian women''s involvement in the material textual culture of the period shows how they could publish their own works in manuscript and print and how they promoted the first publication of works composed by others, acting as patrons or dedicatees. It describes how they copied manuscripts and helped to make and sell printed books in collaboration with men, how they received books as gifts and borrowed or bought them, how they commissioned manuscripts for themselves and how they might listen to works in spoken or sung performance. Brian Richardson''s richly documented study demonstrates the powerful social function of books in the Renaissance: texts-in-motion helped to shape women''s lives and sustain their social and spiritual communities.Table of Contents1. Publishing texts; 2. Making and selling books; 3. Women as scribes; 4. Access to texts.

    15 in stock

    £79.79

  • Cambridge University Press Still Shakespeare and the Photography ofPerformance

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisStill Shakespeare and the Photography of Performance examines the place of photography in the reception of the Shakespeare canon since the invention of the camera, looking at how photographic images have shaped perceptions of historicity, performance, and Shakespearean character, and how their dissemination has affected Shakespearean authority. Barnden reveals how photography has conditioned the reception of Shakespeare''s works in two key ways. Firstly, as a form of performance documentation, photographs shape the way individual performances are remembered and their positioning in relation to traditional and iconoclastic interpretations of the text. Secondly, photographs are vehicles of Shakespearean iconography, encouraging certain compositions and interpretations. Exploring both theatrical and staged art photographs, Still Shakespeare demonstrates the role of photography as a contributor to the calcification of Shakespearean quotation, advertising, and iconography, and to the attrition of the relationship between image and text whereby images become attached to narratives far beyond their original context.Trade Review'… Shakespeare and the Photography of Performance is a fascinating book for this photoshopping age … Still Shakespeare offers an enlightening and engaging introduction to the study of Shakespeare photography that should appeal to performance historians and theatre creators alike.' Daniel Yabut, Cahiers Élisabéthains: A Journal of English Renaissance StudiesTable of ContentsIntroduction: leave not a rack behind; Part I. Photographing Performers: 1. Liveness, documentation, and the RSC's dreams, 1954–77; 2. Photographing the past in the theatre of Charles Kean; 3. Julia Margaret Cameron, sympathetic Shakespeare and photographic afterlives; Part II. Iconography, Photography, and Hamlet: 4. 'Too much of water': Ophelia, photography, dissolution; 5. Poor Yorick: the photograph as memento mori; Epilogue; Select bibliography; Index.

    10 in stock

    £85.50

  • Cambridge University Press A History of the Literature of the U.S. South Volume 1

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisA History of the Literature of the U.S. South provides scholars with a dynamic and heterogeneous examination of southern writing from John Smith to Natasha Trethewey. Eschewing a master narrative limited to predictable authors and titles, the anthology adopts a variegated approach that emphasizes the cultural and political tensions crucial to the making of this regional literature. Certain chapters focus on major white writers (e.g., Thomas Jefferson, William Faulkner, the Agrarians, Cormac McCarthy), but a substantial portion of the work foregrounds the achievements of African American writers like Frederick Douglass, Zora Neale Hurston, and Sarah Wright to address the multiracial and transnational dimensions of this literary formation. Theoretically informed and historically aware, the volume''s contributors collectively demonstrate how southern literature constitutes an aesthetic, cultural and political field that richly repays examination from a variety of critical perspectives.Trade Review'Recommended.' M. L. Robertson, Choice ConnectTable of ContentsIntroduction. Reconstructing literary history Harilaos Stecopoulos; 1. Fictions of the native south Melanie Benson Taylor; 2. John Smith and the English origins of southern exceptionalism Rob McLoone; 3. Plantation and enlightenment Jennifer Greeson; 4. Geoconfederacy; or, Bartram's Southern archipelago Monique Allewaert; 5. In the shadow of his office: architectures of affect in Jefferson's notes on the State of Virginia Laura Rigal; 6. Shadows of Haiti: racing gender, violence and sentiment in Victor Séjour, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, and Charles Chesnutt Susan Castillo Street; 7. 'Midnight bakings' amid starvation: food and aesthetics in the slave narrative Stephanie Tsank; 8. A calculated fiction: antebellum plantation romances Katharine Burnett; 9. Maroons and marronage in antebellum African American literature Sean Gerrity; 10. Everyday literary culture in the nineteenth century Christopher Hager and Beth Barton Schweiger; 11.'Fables of the Bloody Shirt': reconstruction and the problem of national violence Scott Romine; 12. A heritage unique in the ages: the politics of black southern womanhood in Anna Julia Cooper's a voice from the south by a black woman from the south Joanna Davis-McElligatt; 13. Moonlight and magnolias no more: the new plantation tradition and its respondents Justin Mellette; 14. Women writers and the southern renaissance; or, the work of gender in literary periodization Jay Watson; 15. Southern geographies and new Negro modernism Thadious Davis; 16. 'A fine loud grabble and snatch of AAA and WPA': Faulkner, Hurston, Wright, Bontemps and the depression south Martyn Bone; 17. Provincialism as a positive good: agrarianism and its afterlives Jon Smith; 18. Faulkner's untimely fictions John Matthews; 19. Reconsidering Du Bois's 'Central Text': W. E. B. Du Bois, Sarah Wright, and the problem of the 'Black Worker' Konstantina Karageorgos; 20. Cultural activism and theater of the Civil Rights Movement Elizabeth Rodriguez Fielder; 21. Till the hurt becomes music: gnosticism and improvisation in the poetry of Yusef Komunyakaa Herman Beavers; 22. Undead sound; or, why southern poetry is not dead: the undying work of fathers in Natasha Trethewey, Adam Vines, and Cormac McCarthy Daniel Turner; 23. There is no south: the weird Plantationocene of Jeff VanderMeer's southern reach trilogy Amy Clukey; 24. Hurricane Alley: literature of the coastal south in a time of climate change Valerie Loichot.

    10 in stock

    £84.54

  • Cambridge University Press The Russian Graphosphere 14501850

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe ''graphosphere'' is the dynamic space of visible words. Graphospheres mutate, they are reconfigured with changes in technology, in modes of production, in social structures, in fashion and taste. The graphospheric environment can be public or private, monumental or ephemeral. This book explores a new approach to the study of writing, with a focus on Russia during its ''long early modernity'' from the late fifteenth century to the early nineteenth century. Taking an inclusive approach, it charts unmapped territory, uncovers sources that have almost entirely escaped attention and therefore provides, in the first instance, a unique reference guide to cultures of writing in Russia over four hundred years. Besides generating fresh insights into distinctive features of Russian culture, this outward-looking and accessible book offers a pioneering case study for the wider comparative exploration of the significance of technologies of the word.Trade Review'Recommended for libraries supporting Slavic, East European, and Central Eurasian graduate studies. Includes a most extensive bibliography.' B. K. Beynen, Choice'… insightful … Franklin takes the reader into a world where writing and reading signalled something very different from what they do today.' Marshall Poe, The Times Literary Supplement'Franklin has written an important book, one that inspires readers to reevaluate past assumptions about the history of material texts, categories of writing and the institutions that determine their value. His is a work whose implications extend beyond the chronological and geographical indicators of its title and that has the potential to establish a new branch of literary and cultural studies beyond the boundaries of our field.' University of Southern California Book Prize in Literary and Cultural Studies Committee'Franklin introduces the term [graphosphere] as a 'near neologism,' and with it, inaugurates an entire field. Now that he has done so, readers have cause to celebrate. This is a rare book that opens eyes and reveals new vistas for thought, imagination, and scholarship. It is as electrifying in its novelty as it is dazzling in its erudition … The cumulative force of the book allows us to see the concept of the graphosphere emerge out of a haze and solidify as a real and important way to look at the world, to think about culture and history, to unearth new information and gain new perspectives by cutting across familiar categories in unexpected ways.' Valerie A. Kivelson, Canadian-American Slavic StudiesTable of Contents1. Concepts and contexts; 2. Production in the graphosphere, I: primary writing; 3. Production in the graphosphere, II: secondary writing; 4. Scripts and languages of the graphosphere; 5. Places and times of the graphosphere; 6. Aspects of the ecology of the graphosphere; 7. Aspects of authority and status in the graphosphere; 8. (In)conclusion.

    15 in stock

    £106.00

  • Cambridge University Press Latin Erotic Elegy and the Shaping of SixteenthCentury English Love Poetry

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisA dedicated study of how classical Latin erotic elegy was read in the Renaissance and helped shape the emergence of English love poetry. This book will be of interest to scholars of early modern literature and classical literature, in particular love, gender, sex and the body.Trade Review'… the most enjoyable thing about this volume is the author's delight in the poetry she presents to the reader, which is described within the space of a couple of pages as 'exuberant', 'un-anxious', 'creative' and 'confident, even blasé', with an 'untroubled “pick-and-mix” approach' to reception that is 'programmatically promiscuous'. For G.,[Linda Grant] Renaissance classical reception is a playful and imaginative adventure-and her enthusiasm carries the reader along.' Cora Beth Knowles, Classics for AllTable of ContentsIntroduction: 'All that rout of lascivious poets that wrote epistles and ditties of love'; 1. 'Ovid was there and with him were Catullus, Propertius and Tibullus': transmission, teaching and receptions of Roman love elegy in the Renaissance; 2. 'For truth and faith in her is laid apart': women's words and the construction of masculinity in Catullus' Lesbia poems and Thomas Wyatt; 3. ''Fool', said my muse to me': reading metapoetics in Propertius 2.1 and 4.7, and Astrophil and Stella 1; 4. 'In six numbers let my work rise, and subside in five': authority and impotence in Amores 1.5 and 3.7, Donne's 'To his mistress going to bed', and Nashe's Choice of Valentines; 5. 'My heart … with love did inly burn': female authorship and desire in Sulpicia, Mary Sidney's Antonie and Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus 1.

    15 in stock

    £85.50

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare Survey 73

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisShakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, Survey has published the best international scholarship in English and many of its essays have become classics of Shakespeare criticism. Each volume is devoted to a theme, or play, or group of plays; each also contains a section of reviews of that year''s textual and critical studies and of the year''s major British performances. The theme for Volume 73 is ''Shakespeare and the City''. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at https://www.cambridge.org/core/what-we-publish/collections/shakespeare-survey This fully searchable resource enables users to browse by author, essay and volume, search by play, theme and topic and save and bookmark their results.Table of Contents1. Continental Shakespeare Karen Newman; 2. The stranger at the door: belonging in Shakespeare's Ephesus Nandini Das; 3. City origins, lost identities and print errors in The Comedy of Errors Alice Leonard; 4. The circulation of youthful energy on the early modern London stage: migration, intertheatricality, and 'growing to common players' Harry R. McCarthy; 5. In conversation with Shakespeare in Jacobean London: social insanity and its taming schools in 1 and 2 Honest Whore Chi-Fang Sophia Li; 6. Hearing voices: signal vs urban noise in Coriolanus and Augustine's Confessions Lars Engle; 7. Caesar and Lear in Hong Kong: appropriating Shakespeare to express the inexpressible Miriam Lau Leung Che; 8. Before we sleep: Macbeth and the curtain lecture Neil Rhodes; 9. 'The story shall be changed': antique fables and agency in A Midsummer Night's Dream Charlotte Scott; 10. A lawful magic: new worlds of precedent in Mabo and The Winter's Tale Nicholas Luke; 11. 'Cabined, cribbed, confined': advice to actors and the priorities of Shakespearean scholarship' Michael Cordner; 12. 'What country, friends, is this?': Tim Supple's Twelfth Night revisited Peter J. Smith; 13. Through a glass darkly: Sophie Okonedo's Margaret as racial other in The Hollow Crown: The Wars of the Roses Jennie M. Votava; 14. 'Who's there?': Britain's twenty-first century obsession with celebrity Hamlet (2008-2018) Gemma Kate Allred; 15. Shakespearean performance in England 2019 Stephen Purcell and Paul Prescott; 16. Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles 2018 James Shaw; 17. Critical studies Charlotte Scott; 18. Shakespeare in performance Russell Jackson; 19. Editions and textual studies Peter Kirwan.

    5 in stock

    £94.99

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare in Print

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisDescribed by The Library as 'a genuinely awesome achievement', this volume now appears in a revised and expanded edition which brings the history of Shakespeare publishing vividly to life, offering a masterful historical overview and revealing the greater cultural significance of the ways in which Shakespeare's work has been disseminated.Trade Review'Andrew Murphy's Shakespeare in Print was already a decisive, even-handed, knowledgeable and smart survey of publishing Shakespeare over four centuries. This second edition is even better. In a testament to the energy of this field, and his own immersion in it, Murphy has substantially recast his work - not just by adding a necessary and revealing chapter on digital Shakespeares and the fascinating story of nineteenth-century editions in the formation of twenty-first century technologies. In addition, Shakespeare in Print has revisited and revised earlier parts of the story, drawing on new scholarship about Shakespeare's stationers and early print history, on what parts of the 'new textualism' have been mainstreamed into editing and what elements of the New Bibliography still hold sway, and on the relative importance of debates about authorial revision and collaboration. The result is a brilliant collation of scholarship on textual history, the history of print and publishing, and the impact of the social, cultural, and biographical on editing Shakespeare. In a field sometimes characterised by heat rather than light, it is luminescent: a wonderful book, like no other.' Emma Smith, University of Oxford'I am full of admiration for the thoroughness and attention to detail with which Andrew Murphy has approached the extremely demanding task of bringing his hugely admired study up to date. When it first appeared it was greeted with general acclaim. The new edition seems likely to be similarly admired. Here, as in the original edition, the author succeeds admirably in presenting a mass of scholarly material in a readily comprehensible fashion. His style of writing is unfailingly lucid and elegant.' Stanley Wells, CBE, FRSL, Honorary President, The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust'A formidable bibliographical achievement … this is destined to become a key reference work for Shakespeareans. Thanks to [Murphy], those hunting for truffles in the Bard's back catalogue will have a far better chance of knowing what they are looking at, and how it relates to the field of Shakespeare publishing as a whole.' Times Literary Supplement'An extraordinary work of bibliographical scholarship, at once scrupulously accurate and thoroughly entertaining.' Shakespeare Survey'Murphy's [book is] monumental … the staggering appendix of editions, the various indexes, the substantial bibliography leave one gasping for air and in full gratitude for what he has accomplished.' Renaissance Quarterly'Andrew Murphy is having it both ways. Not content to produce an indispensable reference work, he has simultaneously written an immensely entertaining narrative that makes for compulsive reading … Murphy brings [his material] alive with an enviable lightness of touch, making of Shakespeare in Print not only the authoritative scholarly history of Shakespeare publishing and editing but also a page-turner which many readers will find difficult to put down.' Around the Globe'This is the second edition of an important book first published in 2003 … This deeply learned, well-written volume will be an indispensable reference work for Shakespeareans … Highly recommended.' W. Baker, Choice MagazineTable of ContentsList of Illustrations; List of Tables; Preface; Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations; Part I: Text; Introduction; 1. Bringing Shakespeare to Print; 2. Collecting Shakespeare; 3. The Tonson Era 1: Rowe to Warburton; 4. The Tonson Era 2: Johnson to Malone; 5. Copyright Disputes: English Publishers; 6. Copyright Disputes: Scottish and Irish Publishers; 7. American Editions; 8. Nineteenth-Century Popular Editions; 9. Nineteenth-Century Scholarly Editions; 10. The New Bibliography; 11. Shakespeare in the Modern Era; 12. Shakespeare Beyond Print; Part II: Introduction to the Chronological Appendix; Chronological Appendix; Index 1: By Play/Poem Title; Index 2: By Series/Edition Title; Index 3: By Editor/Creator; Index 4: By Publisher/Printer/Host; Index 5: By Place of Publication (excluding London); Notes; Bibliography; Main Index.

    5 in stock

    £110.20

  • Cambridge University Press Shakespeare Survey 74

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisShakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, Survey has published the best international scholarship in English and many of its essays have become classics of Shakespeare criticism. Each volume is devoted to a theme, or play, or group of plays; each also contains a section of reviews of that year''s textual and critical studies and of the year''s major British performances. The theme for Volume 74 is ''Shakespeare and Education. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at https://www.cambridge.org/core/what-we-publish/collections/shakespeare-survey This fully searchable resource enables users to browse by author, essay and volume, search by play, theme and topic and save and bookmark their results.Table of Contents1. Whither goest thou, Public Shakespearian? Sharon O'Dair and Timothy Francisco; 2. Teaching Shakespeare in a Time of Hate Alexa Alice Joubin and Lisa S. Starks; 3. Playful Pedagogy and Social Justice: Digital Embodiment in the Shakespeare Classroom Gina Bloom, Nicholas Toothman, and Evan Buswell; 4. Digital Resources, Teaching Online and Evolving International Pedagogic Practice Christie Carson; 5. Teaching Shakespeare with Performance Pedagogy in an Online Environment Esther Schupak; 6. PPE for Shakespeareans: Pandemic, Performance, and Education Kevin A. Quarmby; 7. 'In India': Shakespeare and Prison in Kolkata and Mysore Sheila T. Cavanagh; 8. Shakespeare for Cops Jeffrey R. Wilson; 9. Younger Generations and Empathic Communication: Learning to Feel in Another Language with Shakespeare at the Silvano Toti Globe Theatre in Rome Maddalena Pennacchia; 10. Shakespeare in nineteenth-century Bengal: An Imperative of 'New Learning' Madhumita Saha; 11. Forging a Republic of Letters: Shakespeare, politics and a new university in early twentieth-century Portugal Rui Carvalho Homem; 12. Cultural Inclusivity and Student Shakespeare Performances in Late-Colonial Singapore, 1950-9 Emily Soon; 13. Using performance to strengthen the higher education sector: Shakespeare in twenty-first century Vietnam Sarah Olive; 14. Counterpublic Shakespeares in the American Education Marketplace Jillian Snyder; 15. Taking Love's Labour's Lost seriously Nigel Wood; 16. The Thyestean Language of English Revenge Tragedy on the University and Popular Stages Elizabeth Sandis; 17. Going to School with(out) Shakespeare: Conversations with Edward's Boys Harry R. McCarthy and Perry Mills; 18. Intimacy and Schadenfreude in Reports of Problems in Early Modern Productions Ceri Sullivan; 19. The True Tragedy as a Yorkist Play? Problems in Textual Transmission Richard Stacey; 20. Henry VIII and Henry IX: Unlived lives and re-written histories Laura Jayne Wright; 21. 'And his works in a glass case': The Bard in the Garden and the Legacy of the Shakespeare Ladies Club Genevieve Kirk; 22. Hamlet and John Austen's Devil with a (Dis)pleasing Shape Luisa Moore; 23. Shakespeare, #MeToo, and his New Contemporaries Pamela Royston Macfie; 24. 'While memory holds a seat in this distracted globe': A Look Back at the Arden Shakespeare Third Series Jennifer Young; 25. Shakespeare Productions in London Lois Potter; 26. Productions Outside London Peter Kirwan; 27. Professional Productions in the British Isles, January – December 2019 James Shaw; 28. The Year's Contribution to Shakespeare Studies: 1. Critical Studies reviewed by Jane Kingsley-Smith; 2. Editions and Textual Studies reviewed by Emma Depledge.

    10 in stock

    £89.29

  • Shakespeares Queer Analytics

    Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Shakespeares Queer Analytics

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewA daring synthesis of queer theory, quantitative digital analysis and book history, this study showed me how little I knew about Shakespeare’s most enigmatic poem and its contexts. Genuinely original and potentially revolutionary. -- Jonathan Hope, Arizona State University, USAShakespeare’s Queer Analytics is an illuminating look at the perennially puzzling Love’s Martyr. Rodrigues skilfully brings computation, attribution studies, and queer theory together and makes important contributions to each of these fields. * Stephen Guy-Bray, University of British Columbia, Canada *Table of ContentsList of Plates, Figures, and Tables Series Editors' Preface Preface Acknowledgements Note on Text Introduction: Love’s Martyr and the Case for Queer Analytics Queering Computation 1. Queerness at Scale: The Radical Singularities of Love’s Martyr 2. Competitive Intimacies in the Poetical Essays Computing Queerness 3. “Neither two nor one were called”: Queer Logic and “The Phoenix and Turtle” Appendixes with Jonathan Hicks 1. Technical Appendix 2. Love’s Martyr’s Poetical Essays 3. Love’s Martyr’s Dialogues and Cantos Bibliography Notes Index

    2 in stock

    £98.30

  • James Thomson's The Seasons, Print Culture, and

    Lehigh University Press James Thomson's The Seasons, Print Culture, and

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDrawing on the methods of textual and reception studies, book history, print culture research, and visual culture, this interdisciplinary study of James Thomson’s The Seasons (1730) understands the text as marketable commodity and symbolic capital which throughout its extended affective presence in the marketplace for printed literary editions shaped reading habits. At the same time, through the addition of paratexts such as memoirs of Thomson, notes, and illustrations, it was recast by changing readerships, consumer fashions, and ideologies of culture. The book investigates the poem’s cultural afterlife by charting the prominent place it occupied in the visual cultures of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain. While the emphasis of the chapters is on printed visual culture in the form of book illustrations, the book also features discussions of paintings and other visual media such as furniture prints. Reading illustrations of iconographic moments from The Seasons as paratextual, interpretive commentaries that reflect multifarious reading practices as well as mentalities, the chapters contextualise the editions in light of their production and interpretive inscription. They introduce these editions’ publishers and designers who conceived visual translations of the text, as well as the engravers who rendered these designs in the form of the engraving plate from which the illustration could then be printed. Where relevant, the chapters introduce non-British illustrated editions to demonstrate in which ways foreign booksellers were conscious of British editions of The Seasons and negotiated their illustrative models in the sets of engraved plates they commissioned for their volumes.Trade ReviewRanging widely without sacrificing what is an exhaustive analysis of single images, the book wears its encyclopedic knowledge lightly.... What distinguishes James Thomson’s The Seasons, Print Culture, and Visual Interpretation,1730–1842 and what will win it a broad audience is Jung’s salutary commitment to “reconnecting” book-historical inquiries to art-critical discussions of illustration or iconotext... This focus on both the technological and cultural contexts for book illustration will attract a broad, interdisciplinary audience... Fusing book history with art criticism toinvestigate the intersections of technology, marketing, and eighteenth-century poetic reception, Jung’s study promises to reshape the field of book illustration studies. * ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes, and Reviews *More than 100 reproductions, many from the author's own collection, make this book impressive as a labor of love as well as of scholarship.... Jung has made a significant contribution to Thomson scholarship and the history of eighteenth century book illustration. * New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century *Sandro Jung’s study of The Seasons is a fresh and stimulating history of the publishing and marketing of one of the most popular texts of the eighteenth century. But it is also far more than that. This book radically extends our understanding of the cultural and economic value of Thomson’s poem by investigating its visual readings and its complex cultural afterlife within and far beyond Britain as the poem’s imagery morphed across an astonishing range of visual arts, including engravings in books, prints, cartoons, ceramics, furniture, and music. The result is a persuasive demonstration of the intersections between technology, aesthetics, commerce, market, and reception. -- James Raven, University of Essex and Magdalene College, University of CambridgeHere is the writing of a fresh new chapter in the scholarship of The Seasons. Consideration of print, paratexts, pictures, price, and pocket diaries all make for the richest contextualisation yet of the production and consumption of James Thomson's poetic masterpiece from its first appearance to the early decades of the nineteenth century. -- Gerard Carruthers, Francis Hutcheson Professor of Scottish Literature, University of GlasgowTable of ContentsList of FiguresAcknowledgments Reading the Visual Paratext Editions of The Seasons: 1730–1798 Paintings and Prints Subscription Ventures, Pocket Diaries, and Up-Market Prints Editions of The Seasons: 1802–1842 Epilogue

    1 in stock

    £33.25

  • Sydney University Press Ambivalent Macbeth

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisMacbeth is often read in a singular fashion: either as a cautionary morality tale warning against ambition, or as a psychological study of evil. In Ambivalent Macbeth, renowned Shakespeare scholar R.S. White argues that these differing readings result from a profoundly ambivalent play, and that this quality is a clue to its greatness.White explores how radical ambivalence permeates the atmosphere, imagery, themes and characterisation of 'the Scottish play'. He considers Shakespeare's historical context and source material, and examines key cinematic, theatrical and other adaptations of the play. Throughout, he argues that an open-minded acceptance of ambivalence can inspire a multitude of readings, and that this complexity helps to explain the play's intriguing longevity.Trade Review'Having seen two Macbeths already this year ... I was glad to have this exploration of why it is so perennially reinterpretable. ... It is informed, too, by his work for the Centre for the History of Emotions, resulting in a fine discussion of the characters' emotional worlds. Other highlights are the account of the problematics of blending pro-Scot and pro-English sources and of the play's insistence on the numbers two and three; the performance history; and a revisiting of the almost lost art of the study of Shakespeare's imagery.' -- Lisa Hopkins -- Times Higher Education'For White, Shakespeare poses open and problematic questions, and insists our answers must be indeterminate and inconclusive. [White] goes further to suggest that this is the essence of the quality of the play.' -- Barry Gillard -- The Australian'[A demonstration of] White's hope for this work to provide 'suggestions which other scholars might take up' ... Ambivalent Macbeth helpfully foregrounds the many questions that Macbeth raises and certainly prompts further research.' -- Michael Cop -- Parergon'Themed chapters treat an impressive array of topics, including sources, scholarship, character and emotion, time, equivocation, evil, imagery, and dramatic history.' -- Ellen Mackay -- Studies in English Literature 1500-1900Table of ContentsPreface and acknowledgements Prologue: sinners as heroes 1. Contexts of ambiguity: text, sources, history 2. 'Fair is foul and foul is fair': the radical ambivalence of Macbeth 3. 'Nothing is but what is not': emotional worlds of characters in Macbeth4. 'The seeds of time' and the Macbeths5. 'Palter with us in a double sense': leading ideas - temptation, equivocation, evil6. 'This is the very painting of your fear': imagery and the emotional world of Macbeth7. Macbeth on stage and screen Bibliography Index

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Sir Francis Bacon

    Clinical Press Ltd Sir Francis Bacon

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisA new and controversial biography of Sir Francis Bacon succinctly putting forward the theory that he was one of Elizabeths illegitimate offspring and the writer of Shakespeares plays.

    3 in stock

    £9.50

  • The Connell Guide To Shakespeare's Twelfth Night

    £10.41

  • Andrew Marvell: A Literary Life

    Springer Nature Switzerland AG Andrew Marvell: A Literary Life

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book provides an accessible account of the poet and politician Andrew Marvell’s life (1621-1678) and of the great events which found reflection in his work and in which he and his writings eventually played a part. At the same time, considerable space is afforded to reflecting deeply on the modes and meanings of Marvell’s art, redressing the balance of recent biography and criticism which has tended to dwell on the public and political aspects of this literary life at the expense of lyric invention and lyric possibility. Moving beyond the familiar terms of imitation and influence, the book aims at reconstructing an embodied history of reading and writing, acts undertaken within a series of complex physical and social environments, from the Hull Charterhouse to the coffee houses and print shops of Restoration London. Care has been taken to cover the whole of Marvell’s career, in verse and prose, even as the book places the lyric achievement at the centre of its vision. Table of Contents1 Introduction: A Literary Life?2 Andreae Filiae: East Riding, Yorkshire, 1621–1633 3 In loco parentis: Cambridge, 1633–1641 4 ‘Our wits have drawn th’infection of our times’: London and the Continent, 1641–1650 5 ‘Some great prelate of the grove’: London and Nun Appleton, Yorkshire, 1650–1652 6 ‘With my most humble service’: England and the Continent, 1652–1659 7 ‘His anger reached that rage which passed his art’: England, the Netherlands, and the Baltic, 1659–1667 8 ‘The interest and happiness of the king and kingdom’: London, 1667–1678

    1 in stock

    £14.39

  • Romantik 2020: Journal for the Study of

    V&R unipress GmbH Romantik 2020: Journal for the Study of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe study of romantic modes of thought

    1 in stock

    £21.59

  • Othello, The Moor of Venice

    Orient Blackswan Pvt Ltd Othello, The Moor of Venice

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £5.56

  • Measure for Measure

    Orient Blackswan Pvt Ltd Measure for Measure

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £6.60

  • Museum Tusculanum Press Angles on the English Speaking World: Volume 5:

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis volume contains 11 new papers on Shakespeare written by members of the Department of English at the University of Copenhagen and other Danish universities plus a few international Shakespeare scholars. They fit into an overall theme and are included because they are about Shakespeare -- as text, as theatre, in his age, and through the ages. Beside showing many different ways of thinking and writing about Shakespeare, the eleven articles fall into a pattern if read together in the order they are printed. The papers are varied and wide-ranging: contemporary contexts, tradition, language and style, performance, translation and modern appropriation.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

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