William Shakespeare's sämtliche Werke: Hamlet
Author : William Shakespeare
Publisher :
Page : 262 pages
File Size : 32,67 MB
Release : 1883
Category :
ISBN :
Author : William Shakespeare
Publisher :
Page : 262 pages
File Size : 32,67 MB
Release : 1883
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Author : Marvin Rosenberg
Publisher : University of Delaware Press
Page : 1006 pages
File Size : 36,85 MB
Release : 1992
Category : Drama
ISBN : 9780874134803
Every reader is an actor according to Rosenberg. To prepare the actor-reader for insights, Rosenberg draws on major intepretations of the play worldwide, in theatre and in criticism, wherever possible from the first known performances to the present day. The book is rich and provocative on every question about the play.
Author : William Shakespeare
Publisher :
Page : 134 pages
File Size : 32,77 MB
Release : 1920
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Author : Tzachi Zamir
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 297 pages
File Size : 21,15 MB
Release : 2018
Category : Drama
ISBN : 0190698519
Does philosophy gain or lose when it is embedded within literature or embodied by drama? Does literary criticism gain or lose when it turns to literary works as occasions for abstract reflection? Leading literary scholars and philosophers interrogate philosophical dimensions of Shakespeare's Hamlet with these urgent questions in view. Scholars probe Hamlet's own insights, assess the significance of philosophy's literary-dramatic framing by this play, and trace the philosophically-relevant underpinnings revealed by historical transformations in Hamlet's reception. They focus on the play's thematizations of subjectivity, knowledge, sex, grief, self-theatricalization. Examining Shakespeare's play from a philosophical standpoint sharpens the questions the play itself so famously poses: What counts as a proper response to injustice upon realizing that whatever one does, there can be no undoing of the initial wrong? What do our commitments to the dead amount to? How to persist in infusing significance into action while grasping the degradation of death and our own replaceability? Scholars at the forefront of their fields tackle these and other questions from a wide range of viewpoints, illuminating the central concerns of one of Shakespeare's masterpieces.
Author : William Shakespeare
Publisher :
Page : 402 pages
File Size : 48,63 MB
Release : 1883
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Jesús Tronch-Pérez
Publisher : Universitat de València
Page : 416 pages
File Size : 27,30 MB
Release : 2002
Category : Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN : 9788437053813
A Synoptic Hamlet is an alternative response to the editorial problems of this multiple-text play. Like most critical editions, it presents the early texts in a manner helpful to the general reader by modernizing spelling and punctuation, and emending non-sensical readings. However, it does not hide the text’s diversity by exclusively selecting readings from either the Second Quarto or the First Folio in order to reconstruct a single-reading version corresponding to the authentic Hamlet. Rather, it makes their significant variants immediately available in the line itself (offering alternative editorial interpretations of identical or similar readings at certain points). Thus the reader can have a direct appreciation of the divergence and similarity between these early texts from which the Hamlet of today is known.
Author : William Shakespeare
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 22,26 MB
Release : 1965
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Shakespeare
Publisher :
Page : 204 pages
File Size : 21,4 MB
Release : 1884
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Author : Peter Holland
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 445 pages
File Size : 27,90 MB
Release : 2010-10-14
Category : Drama
ISBN : 0521769159
The theme for Shakespeare Survey 63 is 'Shakespeare's English Histories and their Afterlives'.
Author : Andreas Höfele
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 346 pages
File Size : 46,63 MB
Release : 2016-09-09
Category : Drama
ISBN : 0191028622
No Hamlets is the first critical account of the role of Shakespeare in the intellectual tradition of the political right in Germany from the founding of the Empire in 1871 to the 'Bonn Republic' of the Cold War era. In this sustained study, Andreas Höfele begins with Friedrich Nietzsche and follows the rightist engagement with Shakespeare to the poet Stefan George and his circle, including Ernst Kantorowicz, and the literary efforts of the young Joseph Goebbels during the Weimar Republic, continuing with the Shakespeare debate in the Third Reich and its aftermath in the controversy over 'inner emigration' and concluding with Carl Schmitt's Shakespeare writings of the 1950s. Central to this enquiry is the identification of Germany and, more specifically, German intellectuals with Hamlet. The special relationship of Germany with Shakespeare found highly personal and at the same time highIy political expression in this recurring identification, and in its denial. But Hamlet is not the only Shakespearean character with strong appeal: Carl Schmitt's largely still unpublished diaries of the 1920s reveal an obsessive engagement with Othello which has never before been examined. Interest in German philosophy and political thought has increased in recent Shakespeare studies. No Hamlets brings historical depth to this international discussion. Illuminating the constellations that shaped and were shaped by specific appropriations of Shakespeare, Höfele shows how individual engagements with Shakespeare and a whole strand of Shakespeare reception were embedded in German history from the 1870s to the 1950s and eventually 1989, the year of German reunification.