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Marlowe and Shakespeare

The Critical Rivalry
BuchGebunden
382 Seiten
Englisch
Springer Palgrave Macmillanerschienen am24.08.20171st ed. 2017
Instead of asserting any alleged rivalry between Marlowe and Shakespeare, Sawyer examines the literary reception of the two when the writers are placed in tandem during critical discourse or artistic production.mehr
Verfügbare Formate
BuchGebunden
EUR128,39
BuchKartoniert, Paperback
EUR90,94
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Produkt

KlappentextInstead of asserting any alleged rivalry between Marlowe and Shakespeare, Sawyer examines the literary reception of the two when the writers are placed in tandem during critical discourse or artistic production.
Zusammenfassung
Focuses on the critical reception of Marlowe and Shakespeare over several centuries

Adds to the understanding of one of the most widely discussed rivalries in literary history

Examines the critical and cultural discourse of literary critics, playwrights, novelists, and directors

Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-1-349-95226-7
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
Erscheinungsjahr2017
Erscheinungsdatum24.08.2017
Auflage1st ed. 2017
Seiten382 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Gewicht616 g
IllustrationenXI, 382 p. 4 illus.
Artikel-Nr.42600353

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1 Introduction: "The Rivals of My Watch".- Chapter 2: "Locating the Earliest 'Critics'".- Chapter 3: The Seventeenth Century: "Collaboration, Co-Authorship and the Death of the Author(s)".- Chapter 4: The Long Eighteenth Century: "Limbs Torn Asunder, Borrowing the Bones, Identifying the Corpus".- Chapter 5: The Nineteenth Century: "The Space(s) of the Critical Rivalry in London".- Chapter 6: The Twentieth Century: "Formalization, Polarization, and Fictionalization".- Chapter 7: The Twenty-First Century: "Trauma, Drama, and Conspiracy".-mehr
Kritik
"Robert Sawyer's Marlowe and Shakespeare: The Critical Rivalry takes the complex meaning of the term 'rival' in the early modern period as something between 'competitor' and 'partner' or even 'collaborator' to survey the way the two playwrights have been viewed in relation to one another ... . The book will be very valuable to graduate students, in particular, who wish to learn the critical history of their field and to any scholar interested in the cultural history of literary criticism." (Henry S. Turner, SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900, Vol. 58 (02), 2018)mehr

Autor

Robert Sawyer is Professor of Literature and Language at East Tennessee State University. Author of Victorian Appropriations of Shakespeare, he is also co-editor of Shakespeare and Appropriation, and Harold Bloom's Shakespeare. A section of Chapter 7 was awarded a Calvin Hoffman Prize in 2013.