Compare prices for contemporary shakespeare
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University Press of America Titus Andronicus: Modern Text (Contemporary Shakespeare S.)
Shakespeare's most violent and gory play, <I>Titus Andronicus</I> was written in 1592, and represents the dramatist's first foray into the popular genre of revenge tragedy (many editors argue with at least one other collaborator). The result was spectacular, including scenes of murder, human sacrifice, rape, bodily mutilation and cannibalism. Set in late-imperial Rome, the action begins with the Roman general Titus Andronicus and his triumphant return from wars with the Goths. Leading Queen Tamora and her sons as prisoners, Titus stumbles into a power struggle between Saturninus and his brother Bassianus. Titus fatally backs Saturninus, who rapidly turns on the old general and marries Tamora. The implications for the Andronicus family are disastrous. More of Titus' sons are killed, his daughter Lavinia is brutally raped by Tamora's sons, and as Titus begins his descent into madness and despair he even has his own hand cut off in an act of awful trickery. As Titus plots his bloody revenge, he reflects that Rome is but a wilderness of tigers. The ending is one of the most gruesome conclusions to any dramatic tragedy, and leaves Hannibal Lecter in <I>The Silence of the Lambs</I> looking quite restrained. Although the play has put audiences off for centuries due to its apparently gratuitous violence, more recently critics have discerned something more to it than pure shock, but that might say more about us than the Elizabethans. .--<I>Jerry Brotton</I>
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£7.60
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Atlantic Books Antony and Cleopatra (Contemporary Shakespeare S.)
<I>Antony and Cleopatra</I> is one of the greatest love stories of all time, and one of the finest, and most poetic of all the high Shakespearean tragedies. Written between 1606 and 1607, it draws on the Roman historian Plutarch and his account of the collapse of the Roman Republic and the birth of the empire under Octavius Caesar, son of Julius. This imperial struggle for political power between Octavius, Lepidus, Pompey and Mark Antony provides the backdrop for the play's extraordinary evocation of the tempestuous love of Antony for Cleopatra, his Egyptian dish. <p> The play cuts back and forth between the cold, calculating realpolitik of imperial Rome, and the sensuous, erotic world of Egypt and Cleopatra's luxurious and hedonistic court. Yet what is most memorable about the play is its remarkably poetic language; its lush image of Cleopatra in her barge, like a burnished throne / Burned on the water, and beggared all description, and its erotic fusion of images of sex and death which find their ultimate culmination in the suicides of Antony and Cleopatra in the final scenes of the play. A notoriously elusive play for both critics and theatre directors alike, <I>Antony and Cleopatra's</I> fascination with questions of race, sex, death, power and politics makes it one of the most compelling of all of Shakespeare's plays. However, the stage is undoubtedly held by Cleopatra, and Enobarbus' attempt to explain her fascination, as powerful and evocative today as ever: Age cannot wither her, Nor custom stale her infinite variety.--<I>Jerry Brotton</I>
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£6.44
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University Press of America Love's Labour's Lost: Modern Text (Contemporary Shakespeare S.)
Another example of Shakespeare's comic fascination with the battle between and misunderstanding of the sexes, <I>Love's Labour's Lost</I> is a difficult play to read, but one which is extremely effective on stage. The Play opens with King Ferdinand of Navarre and his courtiers taking a vow of study and sexual abstinence for a period of three years. However, their vows are soon placed under strain with the arrival of the Princess of France and her ladies in waiting. The inevitable happens, and the different couples attempt to surreptitiously communicate, causing much hilarious confusion and embarrassment in the process. Shakespeare deploys every farcical element in the book, including impersonation, wrongly delivered letters, outrageous puns and word play, fights, drunkenness and masquerades, as Ferdinand's entourage soon learn that rather than running from women to books, it is in fact the opposite sex that are the books, the arts, the academes/That show, contain, and nourish all the world. However, one of the most interesting aspects of the play is that it does not end with everyone marrying and living happily ever after. The women give as good as they get from the men, and in the end turn the tables in extremely interesting ways. One of Shakespeare's most linguistically challenging, but also intelligent comedies. --<I>Jerry Brotton</I>
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£6.98
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Xlibris Corporation Contemporary Shakespeare
Pages: 116, Paperback, Xlibris Corporation
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 7 to 11 days
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£14.00
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