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Shakespeare's Humanism

Shakespeare's Humanism

Shakespeare's Humanism

Robin Headlam Wells, Roehampton University, London
April 2009
Available
Paperback
9780521107235

    Renaissance humanists believed that if you want to build a just society you must begin with the facts of human nature. This book argues that the idea of a universal human nature was as important to Shakespeare as it was to every other Renaissance writer. In doing so it questions the central principle of post-modern Shakespeare criticism. Postmodernists insist that the notion of defining a human essence was alien to Shakespeare and his contemporaries; as radical anti-essentialists, the Elizabethans were, in effect, postmodernists before their time. In challenging this claim Shakespeare's Humanism shows that for Shakespeare, as for every other humanist writer in this period, the key to all wise action was 'the knowledge of our selves and our human condition'.

    Product details

    April 2009
    Paperback
    9780521107235
    292 pages
    229 × 152 × 17 mm
    0.43kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Introduction
    • 1. Shakespeare and English humanism
    • 2. Gender
    • 3. Value pluralism
    • 4. Social justice
    • 5. Men, women and civilisation
    • 6. Love and death
    • 7. History
    • 8. Genius
    • 9. Anti-humanism
    • Notes
    • Select bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Robin Headlam Wells , Roehampton University, London

      Robin Headlam Wells is Professor of English Literature and Director of the Centre for Research in Renaissance Studies at Roehampton University, London. His books include Elizabethan Mythologies (Cambridge, 1994) and Shakespeare on Masculinity (Cambridge, 2000).