Shakespeare's Domestic Tragedies : Violence in the Early Modern Home Paperback / softback
by Emma (Newcastle University) Whipday
Paperback / softback
Description
Domestic tragedy was an innovative genre, suggesting that the lives and sufferings of ordinary people were worthy of the dramatic scope of tragedy.
In this compelling study, Whipday revises the narrative of Shakespeare's plays to show how this genre, together with neglected pamphlets, ballads, and other forms of 'cheap print' about domestic violence, informed some of Shakespeare's greatest works.
Providing a significant reappraisal of Hamlet, Othello, and Macbeth, the book argues that domesticity is central to these plays: they stage how societal and familial pressures shape individual agency; how the integrity of the house is associated with the body of the housewife; and how household transgressions render the home permeable.
Whipday demonstrates that Shakespeare not only appropriated constructions of the domestic from domestic tragedies, but that he transformed the genre, using heightened language, foreign settings, and elite spheres to stage familiar domestic worlds.
Information
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Out of stock
- Format:Paperback / softback
- Pages:274 pages, Worked examples or Exercises; 1 Halftones, color; 8 Halftones, black and white
- Publisher:Cambridge University Press
- Publication Date:08/10/2020
- Category:
- ISBN:9781108463300
Information
-
Out of stock
- Format:Paperback / softback
- Pages:274 pages, Worked examples or Exercises; 1 Halftones, color; 8 Halftones, black and white
- Publisher:Cambridge University Press
- Publication Date:08/10/2020
- Category:
- ISBN:9781108463300