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Stealing the Story
0 - Default Title
Description
In Shakespeare's works, sovereignty and succession are replaced by rhetoric and rationalization in plays such as Richard II. When he tries to locate the birth of moral corruption and contemplates teh very real possibility that political agenda invent a system that justifieds corruption, he turns to plays such as Macbeth where he is able to place the figuers of a fallen Adam and Eve vilified in the decision to do evil acts not in the contemplation of them. In Antony and Cleopatra, he investigates the painful process of recreating social, spiritual, and individual identities by manipulating and exploiting the mythic realm. In Hamlet contradictory signifiers create division, as a society, which has abandoned orality grows to trust misleading manifestations and representations. Finally, in plays such as King Lear the written word supercedes the spoken word. When one looks at Shakespeare's plays, it is apparent that he highlights the ominous quality implicit in re-creation as he marks the emergence of the totalitarian state and warns that the creative and generative impulse can give birth to destruction.
Product details
Edition:
1
Number of Pages:
188
Release Date:
2007-06-30
Publication Date:
2007-06-01
Publisher:
Bloomsbury 3PL
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
0826417361
ISBN13:
9780826417367
Weight:
431 g
Height:
157 cm
Width:
235 cm
Thickness:
15 cm
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