Shakespeare for the wiser sort: Solving Shakespeare's riddles in The Comedy of Errors, Romeo and Juliet, King John, 1-2 Henry IV, The Merchant of Venice, Henry V, Julius Caesar, Othello, Macbeth, and Cymbeline

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Manchester University Press, 30 de jul. de 2018 - 208 páginas
William Shakespeare’s plays are riddled with passages, scenes and sudden plot twists which baffle and confound the most devoted playgoer and the most attentive commentator. Why, for example, didn’t Hamlet succeed to the throne of Denmark at the instant of his father’s death? (It’s not because the Danish throne was elective.) Why does Chorus in Romeo and Juliet promise his audience ‘two houres trafficke of our stage’ when the play obviously runs almost three hours? How is it that Old Hamlet sent his son to school in (Protestant) Wittenberg but his Ghost was sent to (Catholic) Purgatory? and is there cause-and-effect here? How can Lancelot Gobbo be correct (and he is) when he claims Black Monday (the day after Easter) and Ash Wednesday (the 41st day before Easter) once fell on the same day? And what is a ‘dram of eale’? This engaging and lucid book solves these tantalizing riddles and many others.
 

Conteúdo

Shakespeares other smarter audience
1
The new philosophy in Hamlet
8
Queen Elizabeths calendar muddle
17
Shakespeares timeriddles in Romeo and Juliet solved
36
Did Shakespeare know Bandello?
55
Shakespeare rewrites the Holy Ghost
77
The double time crux in Othello solved
106
The men behind the masks of Falstaff Faulconbridge Lamord and Hamlet
127
Appendix
166
Bibliography
174
Index
187
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Sobre o autor (2018)

Steve Sohmer is Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford and a Research Associate at the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)

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