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Main page » Non-Fiction » Science literature » Literature Studies » The World's a Stage: Shakespeare and the Dramatic View of Life


The World's a Stage: Shakespeare and the Dramatic View of Life

 

After discussing the structuralism, post structuralism, Marxist, queer and feminist theories of dramatic action and dramaturgical development, the author posits an ontological (and refreshing) vision of Shakespearian stagecraft and dramatic movement. Shakespeare is seen as an actor and Roman Catholic, an outsider in an early modern Protestant state in the process of dynamic cultural, economic reform and political repression. These themes are reflected in the unsettled, morally ambiguous characterizations that Professor Crosman studies: Hamlet, Polonius, McBeth, Henry V and Falstaff among others. Also discussed are the emergent Latin, Greek and Italian literary modes and their effect on English theatrical prosody.



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Tags: Shakespeare, structuralism, dramatic, unsettled, reflected