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How the Classics Made Shakespeare

โœ Scribed by Jonathan Bate


Publisher
Princeton University Press
Year
2019
Tongue
English
Leaves
377
Series
E. H. Gombrich Lecture Series; 2
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


A book, from the UK's leading Shakespeare scholar, which elucidates the Bard's complex relationship with ancient world, from which he took so much inspiration.

From one of our most eminent and accessible literary critics, a groundbreaking account of how the Greek and Roman classics forged Shakespeareโ€™s imagination

Ben Jonson famously accused Shakespeare of having โ€œsmall Latin and less Greek.โ€ But he was exaggerating. Shakespeare was steeped in the classics. Shaped by his grammar school education in Roman literature, history, and rhetoric, he moved to London, a city that modeled itself on ancient Rome. He worked in a theatrical profession that had inherited the conventions and forms of classical drama, and he read deeply in Ovid, Virgil, and Seneca. In a book of extraordinary range, acclaimed literary critic and biographer Jonathan Bate, one of the worldโ€™s leading authorities on Shakespeare, offers groundbreaking insights into how, perhaps more than any other influence, the classics made Shakespeare the writer he became.

Revealing in new depth the influence of Cicero and Horace on Shakespeare and finding new links between him and classical traditions, ranging from myths and magic to monuments and politics, Bate offers striking new readings of a wide array of the plays and poems. At the heart of the book is an argument that Shakespeareโ€™s supreme valuation of the force of imagination was honed by the classical tradition and designed as a defense of poetry and theater in a hostile world of emergent Puritanism.

Rounded off with a fascinating account of how Shakespeare became our modern classic and has ended up playing much the same role for us as the Greek and Roman classics did for him, How the Classics Made Shakespeare combines stylistic brilliance, accessibility, and scholarship, demonstrating why Jonathan Bate is one of our most eminent and readable literary critics.

โœฆ Table of Contents


CONTENTS
PREFACE & ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
1. The Intelligence of Antiquity
2. Oโ€™er-Picturing Venus
3. Resemblance by Example
4. Republica Anglorum
5. Tragical-Comical- Historical- Pastoral
6. S. P. Q. L.
7. But What of Cicero?
8. Pyrrhusโ€™s Pause
9. The Good Life
10. The Defence of Phantasms
11. An Infirmity Named Hereos
12. The Labours of Hercules
13. Walking Shadows
14. In the House of Fame
APPENDIX: THE ELIZABETHAN VIRGIL
Notes
Index


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