Julius Caesar: A Broadview Internet Shakespeare Edition

Front Cover
Broadview Press, 2012 M10 26 - 280 pages

Julius Caesar is a key link between Shakespeare’s histories and his tragedies. Unlike the Caesar drawn by Plutarch in a source text, Shakespeare’s Caesar is surprisingly modern: vulnerable and imperfect, a powerful man who does not always know himself. The open-ended structure of the play insists that revealing events will continue after the play ends, making the significance of the history we have just witnessed impossible to determine in the play itself.

John D. Cox’s introduction discusses issues of genre, characterization, and rhetoric, while also providing a detailed history of criticism of the play. Appendices provide excerpts from important related works by Lucretius, Plutarch, and Montaigne.

A collaboration between Broadview Press and the Internet Shakespeare Editions project at the University of Victoria, the editions developed for this series have been comprehensively annotated and draw on the authoritative texts newly edited for the ISE. This innovative series allows readers to access extensive and reliable online resources linked to the print edition.

 

Contents

Foreword
9
Acknowledgements
11
Introduction
13
Shakespeares Life
49
Shakespeares Theater
55
A Brief Chronology
61
A Note on the Texts
65
Characters in the Play
67
The Tragedy of Julius Caesar
75
Plutarchs Lives
187
Montaigne on Stoicism and Epicureanism
245
WORKS CITED
269
From the Publisher
274
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

John D. Cox is DuMez Professor of English at Hope College, Holland, Michigan, and has published widely on Shakespeare’s plays and other Renaissance drama.

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