Shakespeare at Work, 1592-1603

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Routledge, 2014 M08 21 - 336 pages

Shakespeare against the background of his times, his world of the theatre and his dramatic development through the last years of Elizabeth’s reign. Originally published in 1933 and republished in 1958, this great work is an imagining, in plain narrative, of the life of Shakespeare backed with evidence of the history of the stage. Whatever wider significances modern critics distill from Shakespeare’s plays, it remains an elementary fact that he wrote plays to interest and entertain his contemporaries and this book takes a look at the immediate interests of his audience and how his work responded to them.

 

Contents

CHAPTER I THE UPSTART CROW
1
CHAPTER II EDUCATION OF A DRAMATIST
28
CHAPTER III EXPERIMENTS
58
CHAPTER IV THE PASSING OF AN ECLIPSE
82
CHAPTER V MATURITY
111
CHAPTER VI THE NEW COMEDY
139
CHAPTER VII THE GLOBE
157
CHAPTER VIII THE LOST LEADER
198
CHAPTER IX TUMULTUOUS INTERLUDES
229
CHAPTER X THE TRAGEDY OF HAMLET
262
CHAPTER XI END OF AN EPOCH
279
COMMENTARY
305
INDEX
319
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G. B. Harrison

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