Kenneth Burke on Shakespeare Kenneth Burke on Shakespeare

Kenneth Burke on Shakespeare

    • 149,00 kr
    • 149,00 kr

Publisher Description

This volume gathers and annotates all of the Shakespeare criticism, including previously unpublished notes and lectures, by the maverick American intellectual Kenneth Burke (1897–1993). Burke’s interpretations of Shakespeare have had an impressive influence on important lines of contemporary scholarship; playwrights and directors have been stirred by his dramaturgical investigations; and many readers outside academia have enjoyed his ingenious dissections of what makes a play function. Burke’s intellectual project continually engaged with Shakespeare’s works, and Burke’s writings on Shakespeare, in turn, have had an immense impact on generations of readers. Carefully edited and annotated, with helpful cross-references, Burke’s fascinating interpretations of Shakespeare remain challenging, provocative, and accessible. Read together, these pieces form an evolving argument about the nature of Shakespeare’s plays and poems. Included are thirteen analyses of individual plays and poems, an introductory lecture explaining his approach to reading Shakespeare, and a substantial appendix of hundreds of Burke’s other references to Shakespeare. Scott L. Newstok also provides a historical introduction and an account of Burke’s legacy. Burke’s enduring familiarity with Shakespeare likely helped shape his own theory of dramatism, an ambitious elaboration of the teatrum mundi conceit. Burke is renowned for his landmark 1951 essay on Othello, which wrestles with concerns still relevant to scholars more than a half century later; his ingenious ventriloquism of Mark Antony’s address over Caesar’s body has likewise found a number of appreciative readers, as have (albeit less frequently) his many other essays on the playwright. Burke’s first and final pieces of literary criticism both examine Shakespearean plays, thereby bookending an impressive, career-long contribution to the field of Shakespeare studies. Among the many major Shakespearean critics who have gratefully acknowledged Burke’s influence are Paul Alpers, Harold Bloom, Stanley Cavell, René Girard, Stephen Greenblatt, and Patricia Parker.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2006
13 December
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
368
Pages
PUBLISHER
Parlor Press, LLC
SIZE
3.8
MB

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Letters from Kenneth Burke to William H. Rueckert, 1959-1987 Letters from Kenneth Burke to William H. Rueckert, 1959-1987
2002
Essays Toward a Symbolic of Motives, 1950–1955 Essays Toward a Symbolic of Motives, 1950–1955
2006
Equipment for Living Equipment for Living
2010
La filosofía de la forma literaria La filosofía de la forma literaria
2003
Permanence and Change Permanence and Change
2018
Retórica de la religión Retórica de la religión
2017