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Troilus and Cressida

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ISBN-10: 1903436699

ISBN-13: 9781903436691

Edition: 3rd 1998 (Revised)

Authors: William Shakespeare, David Bevington

List price: $18.00
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This volume offers the most comprehensive and critically up-to-date edition of Troilus and Cressida available today. Bevington?s learned and engaging introduction discusses the ambivalent status and genre of the play, variously presented in its early printing as a comedy, a history and a tragedy. He examines and assimilates the wide variety of critical responses the play has elicited, and argues its importance in today?s culture as an experimental and open-ended work. He also, however, suggests that this experimentalism may have contributed to its lack of immediate stage success, and goes on to place the work in its late Elizabethan context of political instability and theatrical rivalry. A…    
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Book details

List price: $18.00
Edition: 3rd
Copyright year: 1998
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Publication date: 6/25/1998
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 496
Size: 5.00" wide x 7.75" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 1.100
Language: English

William Shakespeare, 1564 - 1616 Although there are many myths and mysteries surrounding William Shakespeare, a great deal is actually known about his life. He was born in Stratford-Upon-Avon, son of John Shakespeare, a prosperous merchant and local politician and Mary Arden, who had the wealth to send their oldest son to Stratford Grammar School. At 18, Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway, the 27-year-old daughter of a local farmer, and they had their first daughter six months later. He probably developed an interest in theatre by watching plays performed by traveling players in Stratford while still in his youth. Some time before 1592, he left his family to take up residence in London,…    

List of illustrations General editors preface Preface Introduction - A new play, never staled with the stage: genre and the question of original performance - An envious fever of pale and bloodless emulation: historical context in the last years of Elizabeth?s reign - Wars and lechery: demystification of the heroes of ancient Greece - Tis but the chance of war: sceptical deflation of Trojan honour and chivalry - The gods have heard me swear: tragic irony and the death of Hector - As true as Troilus: male obsessions about honour and sexuality - As false as Cressid: women as objects of desire - Call them all panders: voyeurism and male bonding - What?s aught but as tis valued?: commercial and…