Searching Shakespeare

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2003-12-01
Publisher(s): Univ of Toronto Pr
List Price: $74.00

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Summary

Original in topic and approach, Searching Shakespearepresents a political-historical exploration of Shakespeare's drama, examining the plays in the context of current ideological concerns - history, memory, marginality, and nationalism. Derek Cohen predicates his argument on the supposition that the individual, as much as the encompassing state, is subject to the shaping forces and machinery of the ideological surround. Shakespeare's plays, Cohen argues, consistently portray the clash between the passionate search for individuality and the quest for social harmony as irresolvable. The playwright's uncanny ability to carry the reader to the edge of imaginary experience - far from the literal world that is made visible by the text - offers an entry into the subtextual and ironic underside of the dramas. It is in this dark and strange world of slavery, mutilation, sexual jealousy, and suborned murder that the implicit political biases of the plays are most evident and it is here, too, that a modern political analysis reveals why Shakespeare portrayed the quest for individuation and self-expression as necessarily ending in tragedy.

Author Biography

Derek Cohen is a professor of English at York University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
PART I
1(82)
Tragedy and the Nation: Othello
3(16)
History and the Nation: The Second Tetralogy
19(22)
Slave Voices: Caliban and Ariel
41(20)
The Scapegoat Mechanism: Shylock and Caliban
61(22)
PART II
83(56)
The Self-Representations of Othello
85(18)
King Lear and Memory
103(20)
The Past of Macbeth
123(16)
PART III
139(40)
Messengers of Death: The Figure of the Hit Man
141(18)
`noseless, handless, hack'd and chipp'd': Broken Human Bodies
159(20)
Notes 179(8)
Works Cited 187(6)
Index 193

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