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Shakespeare and Senecan Tragedy

Shakespeare and Senecan Tragedy

Shakespeare and Senecan Tragedy

Curtis Perry , University of Illinois
November 2022
Available
Paperback
9781108791618

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    Shakespeare's tragic characters have often been seen as forerunners of modern personhood. It has been assumed that Shakespeare was able to invent such lifelike figures in part because of his freedom from the restrictions of classical form. Curtis Perry instead argues that characters such as Hamlet and King Lear have seemed modern to us in part because they are so robustly connected to the tradition of Senecan tragedy. Resituating Shakespearean tragedy in this way - as backward looking as well as forward looking - makes it possible to recover a crucial political dimension. Shakespeare saw Seneca as a representative voice from post-republican Rome: in plays such as Coriolanus and Othello he uses Senecan modes of characterization to explore questions of identity in relation to failures of republican community. This study has important implications for the way we understand character, community, and alterity in early modern drama.

    • Brings recent advances in understanding Senecan drama from Classics into Shakespeare Studies
    • Combines philology with up-to-date theoretical sophistication about classical reception, political theory, early modern race-making, and the history of the self
    • Rethinks Shakespeare and periodization by remapping the intersecting reception histories of Senecan and Shakespearean tragedy

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Curtis Perry's Shakespeare and Senecan Tragedy is a rich, complex and thought provoking book that breaks new ground in Shakespeare studies … manages to reorient many of the critical issues that have been central to modern and contemporary scholarly discussions of Shakespeare, thereby producing brilliant results and providing a hugely valuable contribution to Shakespeare and early modern studies, as well as classical reception studies.' Domenico Lovascio, Early Modern Literary Studies

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    Product details

    October 2020
    Hardback
    9781108496179
    350 pages
    160 × 235 × 20 mm
    0.59kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Shakespeare and the resources of Senecan tragedy
    • 2. Richard III as Senecan history
    • 3. Seneca and the modernity of Hamlet
    • 4. Seneca and the antisocial in King Lear
    • 5. Republican Coriolanus and Imperial Seneca
    • 6. Seneca, Titus, and Imperial globalization
    • 7. Senecan Othello and the Republic of Venice.
      Author
    • Curtis Perry , University of Illinois

      Curtis Perry is Professor of English with an appointment in the Classics Department at The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the author of various publications, including The Making of Jacobean Culture (Cambridge, 1997) and Literature and Favoritism in Early Modern England (Cambridge, 2006).