John Wiley & Sons How to Read a Shakespeare Play Cover This clear and succinct book is designed for general readers who want to know how to go about readin.. Product #: 978-1-4051-1396-0 Regular price: $27.01 $27.01 Auf Lager

How to Read a Shakespeare Play

Bevington, David

How to Study Literature

Cover

1. Auflage Juni 2006
184 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-4051-1396-0
John Wiley & Sons

Weitere Versionen

Hardcover

This clear and succinct book is designed for general readers who
want to know how to go about reading Shakespeare's works for
pleasure.

* Encourages readers to approach Shakespeare's works
aggressively, interactively, and questioningly

* Focuses on six popular Shakespeare plays - A Midsummer
Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Henry IV Part I, Hamlet,
King Lear and The Tempest

* Recommends the best editions, recordings and DVDs / videos of
these plays

* Discusses the production of the plays on stage and screen

* Introduces readers to different genres in Shakespeare -
romantic comedy, English history, tragedy and romance

* Avoids jargon and abstract literary theory

List of Illustrations.

1. How to Read a Shakespeare Play.

2. A Midsummer Night's Dream.

3. Romeo and Juliet.

4. Henry the Fourth, Part I.

5. Hamlet.

6. King Lear.

7. The Tempest.

8. Epilogue.

Further Reading.

Index
"In just a few pages, the author manages to unearth the full richness of the Bard, opening the reader's mind and asking questions rather than providing glib, easy answers. This is a terrific beginner's volume for the novice English literature student tasked with studying the works of William Shakespeare, and a valuable re-entry point for the intermediate Shakespeare reader looking for additional analytical methods." (Simply Shakespeare, November 2009)

"The first chapter is a fabulous, full-frontal, thirteen-page assault that both dispenses information and suggests effective questions that student readers might employ when reading a text in order to 'read aggressively' (p. 9). What is mildly revolutionary is that it is here, in print, ready to be easily disseminated to students and thus to more easily and readily articulate the type of engagement with a text that we hope and expect our students will undertake. Bevington challenges his readers to think in historical, theatrical, and characterological terms. Bevington's list is instructive and at times brutally honest. Schools should consider investing heavily in this text for the benefit of their pupils; college or university-level students would also be aided by Bevington's straightforward, avuncular reading advice." (Year's Work in English Studies, 2008)
David Bevington is Professor Emeritus at the University of Chicago. His recent publications include Shakespeare: The Seven Ages of Human Experience (second edition, 2005) and Shakespeare: Script, Stage, Screen (with Anne Marie Welsh and Michael L. Greenwald, 2006). He has also edited the Bantam Shakespeare in 29 volumes (currently being reedited), The Complete Works of Shakespeare (fifth edition, 2003), and a number of individual Shakespeare plays including Antony and Cleopatra, Henry IV, Part I, and Troilus and Cressida.

D. Bevington, University of Chicago