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Much Ado about Nothing

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ISBN-10: 1903436834

ISBN-13: 9781903436837

Edition: 3rd 2005 (Revised)

Authors: Claire McEachern, William Shakespeare

List price: $17.00
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Much Ado About Nothing boasts one of Shakespeare's most delightful heroines, most dancing wordplay, and the endearing spectacle of intellectual and social self-importance bested by the desire to love and be loved in return. It offers both the dancing wit of the "merry war" between the sexes, and a sobering vision of the costs of that combat for both men and women. Shakespeare dramatizes a social world in all of its vibrant particulars, in which characters are shaped by the relations between social convention and individual choice. This edition of the play offers in its introduction and commentary an extensive discussion of the materials that informed Shakespeare's compositional choices,…    
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Book details

List price: $17.00
Edition: 3rd
Copyright year: 2005
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Publication date: 9/26/2005
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 345
Size: 5.00" wide x 8.00" long x 0.75" tall
Weight: 0.836
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
Building a play: sources and contexts
The usual suspects: Ariosto and Bandello
Shakespeare?s transformations of his sources: the creation of a social world
The maid
How many gentlemen?
The villain
The lover
Beyond the plot
Denouement
Dialogue and debate forms
Sexual stereotypes
Disdain
Modifications of type
Chaste, silent and obedient
Hero
Cuckolds Structure and style
The course of true love
Two plots?
Style
Prose and the prosaic
Euphuism
Verbal handshakes
The even road of a blank verse
Image patterns
Songs Staging Much Ado
Tonal choices
Social representations
Choice of place and time
Cultural moment
Afterlives
Origins Criticisms Text
First impressions
Making a book
Who is in, who is out
Who gets to say what?
Much Ado About Nothing
Appendix Casting chart
Abbreviations and References