King John: New PerspectivesDeborah T. Curren-Aquino University of Delaware Press, 1989 - 205 pages Illuminating Shakespeare's complex experimentation with the dramatic genre of history, these twelve essays bring such time-honored critical methods as source study and concentration on genre, imagery and language, theme, and character together with more current techniques based on historiography, the new historicism, feminism, pragmatics, performance history, and perspectivism. |
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Page 12
... Criticism has failed to clarify its real character , its tone , its vision . Indeed , of all Shakespeare's early plays this is the one that has receded furthest from us , so that a special effort is needed to recover it . We need to see ...
... Criticism has failed to clarify its real character , its tone , its vision . Indeed , of all Shakespeare's early plays this is the one that has receded furthest from us , so that a special effort is needed to recover it . We need to see ...
Page 14
... criticism to the indeterminacy of de- construction . The two most striking registers of the play's " modernness " are found in the iteration of incredulity and the dizzying , chaotic speed with which events occur and reversals take ...
... criticism to the indeterminacy of de- construction . The two most striking registers of the play's " modernness " are found in the iteration of incredulity and the dizzying , chaotic speed with which events occur and reversals take ...
Page 18
... criticism . . . lies in its demonstration that the play's questions are grounded in reassessments of historical process and inquiry , of genre , of character , of dramaturgy , and of coherence that help to energize Renaissance thought ...
... criticism . . . lies in its demonstration that the play's questions are grounded in reassessments of historical process and inquiry , of genre , of character , of dramaturgy , and of coherence that help to energize Renaissance thought ...
Page 19
... criticism of " the sepa- rate - but - equal " versions of multiple text plays , Hamel finds a climate conducive to " an unprejudiced view of the maligned Troublesome Raigne that by extension will give us a better understanding of those ...
... criticism of " the sepa- rate - but - equal " versions of multiple text plays , Hamel finds a climate conducive to " an unprejudiced view of the maligned Troublesome Raigne that by extension will give us a better understanding of those ...
Page 21
... critics accentuate the differences be- tween the king and his " madcap " illegitimate relation , Porter ( while acknowledging that they " stand in notable contrast as verbal actors , each with his own significantly characteristic range ...
... critics accentuate the differences be- tween the king and his " madcap " illegitimate relation , Porter ( while acknowledging that they " stand in notable contrast as verbal actors , each with his own significantly characteristic range ...
Contents
11 | |
The Historiographic Methodology of King John | 29 |
King John and The Troublesome Raigne A Reexamination | 41 |
King John A Study in Subversion and Containment | 62 |
Patriarchal History and Female Subversion in King John | 76 |
The Kings One Body Unceremonial Kingship in King John | 91 |
So Jest with Heaven Deity in King John | 99 |
Blots Stains and Adulteries The Impurities in King John | 114 |
Fraternal Pragmatics Speech Acts of John and the Bastard | 136 |
Constance A Theatrical Trinity | 144 |
Staging King John A Directors Observations | 165 |
The Unend of King John Shakespeares Demystification of Closure | 173 |
Select Performance History | 186 |
193 | |
Contributors | 197 |
201 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Arden Arthur Arthur's death audience Bastard becomes Blanch blesome Raigne Burckhardt Calderwood ceremony character Charles Kemble Chatillion Church cited in Furness citizens of Angiers claim Claire Bloom Constance Constance's critics Death of King depicts director Dolphin dramatic Drury Lane E. A. J. Honigmann E. M. W. Tillyard Eamon Grennan Elinor Elizabethan England English lords essay F. R. Benson Faulconbridge Festival France French heaven Helen Faucit historiographic Hubert innocent John's reign Kemble King John king's kingship legitimacy Lewis London Macready's majesty Manheim medieval moral mother nobles Pandulph past patriarchal patriotism pattern perspective Philip play's political present production question Renaissance rhetoric Richard Richard II Robert role royal Salisbury scene Shake Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Shakespeare Quarterly Shakespeare's History Plays Shakespeare's King John Shakespearean Meanings Siddons Siddons's speaks speare's spectator speech acts stage Stratford-upon-Avon subversive tetralogy Theatre thee thou throne tion Troublesome Raigne Tudor verbal voice Waith women words
Popular passages
Page 17 - Our wills and fates do so contrary run, That our devices still are overthrown ; Our thoughts are ours, their ends none of our own; So think thou wilt no second husband wed; But die thy thoughts, when thy first lord is dead.