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Great Shakespeareans

Murray, Patrick

Early Modern Literary Studies, 2014, Vol.17 (2), p.1 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Sheffield: Matthew Steggle, Editor, EMLS

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  • Título:
    Great Shakespeareans
  • Autor: Murray, Patrick
  • Assuntos: Borges, Jorge Luis (1899-1986) ; Keats, John (1795-1821) ; Tolstoy, Leo (1828-1910) ; Wilde, Oscar (1854-1900)
  • É parte de: Early Modern Literary Studies, 2014, Vol.17 (2), p.1
  • Descrição: Tiffany Stern rightly points to the inherently problematic nature of faithful translation from 'stage to page' with regard to Shakespeare's writing, observing that '[i]t is a truism to say that the play printed on the page is not the same as a play in performance'.6 The printing press was almost certainly a secondary consideration for a majority of the Shakespeare's output. [...]in reading Shakespeare's plays in particular we are engaging with a writer in a literary genre entirely discrete from its primary incarnation. [...]Auden 'oppos[es] Eliot's theory that [Hamlet] fails due to personal problems that Shakespeare was unable to "drag to light, contemplate, or manipulate into art"' (vol. 12, p. 107), and also 'rewrites' Eliot's seminal essay 'The Metaphysical Poets' (1921) (vol. 12, p. 109). [...]the criticism of Prof. Sir William Empson (Cantab.), Prof. G. Wilson Knight (Oxon.), Prof. C. L. Barber (Cantab.) and Prof. Jan Kott (Harvard and Yale) is collectively examined as part of a 'crucial segment' of the series' wider project to explore, in the words of the volume's editor Hugh Grady, 'the centuries-long and international set of reactions to the extraordinary works of William Shakespeare' (vol. 13, p. 1). [...]Engle relates Empson's Shakespearean writings to his broader critical manifesto.
  • Editor: Sheffield: Matthew Steggle, Editor, EMLS
  • Idioma: Inglês

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