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Shakespeare for the People

Shakespeare for the People

Shakespeare for the People

Working Class Readers, 1800–1900
Andrew Murphy, University of St Andrews, Scotland
September 2010
Available
Paperback
9780521176552
£42.00
GBP
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    Beginning by mapping out an overview of the expansion of elementary education in Britain across the nineteenth century, Andrew Murphy explores the manner in which Shakespeare acquired a working-class readership. He traces developments in publishing which meant that editions of Shakespeare became ever cheaper as the century progressed. Drawing on more than a hundred published and manuscript autobiographical texts, the book examines the experiences of a wide range of working-class readers. Particular attention is focused on a set of radical readers for whom Shakespeare's work had a special political resonance. Murphy explores the reasons why the playwright's working-class readership began to fall away from the turn of the century, noting the competition he faced from professional sports, the cinema, radio and television. The book concludes by asking whether it matters that, in our own time, Shakespeare no longer commands a general popular audience.

    • Draws evidence from over 100 nineteenth-century manuscript and print autobiographies, allowing the reader to engage with a wide range of primary sources
    • Includes an appendix which provides biographical details of the autobiographers quoted
    • Opens up a new area of research for Shakespeare studies - the previously unexplored issue of Shakespeare and class

    Reviews & endorsements

    Review of the hardback: '… informative and enthralling …' The Stage

    Review of the hardback: '… engaging and humane new study. Drawing on about a hundred autobiographies, both published and in manuscript, Shakespeare for the People offers an absorbing mosaic of the role played by the national poet in the consciousness of working-class readers (as opposed to theatre-goers) in nineteenth-century England and Wales. … he writes illuminatingly about the history of publishing and book-selling … His book pays poignant abut quite unsentimental homage to innumerable forgotten lives - to people who managed to discover and then to retain a genuine civilization for themselves, usually in dreadful circumstances.' The Times Literary Supplement

    Review of the hardback: 'Murphy's book is to be lauded as a much-needed exploration of a hitherto neglected segment of the mass readership of Shakespeare that emerged in the nineteenth century. It is an invaluable work that reveals much new material while tacitly inviting its readers to explore further.' Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America

    Review of the hardback: '[An] engagingly written and meticulously researched monograph. … Murphy reveals an extraordinary range of encounters with the national poet, including a wide spectrum of political opinion, as publishers and writers turned to cheap print as a way to advocate both radical and conservative views and to subdue opposing voices. … Once thought to have sunk beneath the surface of the historical record, the reading experiences of Shakespeare by the poorer classes in nineteenth-century England are brought back to life in this wonderful book.' Studies in English Literature

    Review of the hardback: 'There are many fascinating stories … in Andrew Murphy's readable and scholarly history.' Around the Globe

    See more reviews

    Product details

    September 2010
    Paperback
    9780521176552
    256 pages
    229 × 152 × 15 mm
    0.38kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. The educational background
    • 2. The publishing background
    • 3. Reading
    • 4. Political Shakespeare
    • 5. Decline and fall
    • Afterword
    • Appendix 1: Autobiographers by year of birth
    • Appendix 2: Autobiographers listed alphabetically
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Andrew Murphy , University of St Andrews, Scotland