My Account    Basket
 
English  Deutsch  Français  
BOOKSHOP AUTHORS SERVICES COMPANIES
 Highlights
 Bestsellers
 Books
   Search
   New Books
   Disciplines
   Textbooks
   Authors/Editors
   List of Titles
   How to search
 New Books
 Disciplines
 Textbooks
 Series
 Journals
 Rights and Licences
 Peter Lang Press
 Download catalogues
 General information
Quick search
Go!
Advanced search
Sitemap
Contact
Home
 Featured title
Banks, Cerri A.
Black Women Undergraduates, Cultural Capital, and College Success
 Recently viewed books
Lucking, David
The Shakespearean Name
Simtowe, Franklin
Performance and Impact of Mic...
Makilam
Symbols and Magic in the Arts...
Fossum, John Erik / Poirier, ...
The Ties that Bind
Jewanski, Jörg / Sidler, Nata...
Farbe - Licht - Musik
 Details
Recommend this book to someone  
Lucking, David  available 
The Shakespearean Name
Essays on Romeo and Juliet, The Tempest and Other Plays
Year of Publication: 2007
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. 233 pp.
ISBN 978-3-03911-226-5 / US-ISBN 978-0-8204-8912-4  pb.
 
[Review copy request    
[Buy Licence, translation rights] [Copyright]
[PDF version] [Table of contents] [Reading rehearsal / Preface]
Sales price
SFR 76.00 * 52.40 ** 53.90 49.00 £ 44.10 US-$ 75.95
  *  includes VAT - only valid for Germany  [Currency of invoice] 
  **  includes VAT - only valid for Austria
Discipline
  English and American Language and Literature
Book synopsis
This book comprises ten essays on Shakespearean drama, the majority of which focus on the problem of language and more particularly on issues pertaining to names and their meanings. Four of these essays deal specifically with Romeo and Juliet, and examine the work in different sets of terms: as a reply to the aspersions against Shakespeare contained in Greene's Groatsworth of Wit, as a representative site for a kind of archaeology of meaning, as an experiment in the poetics of identity, and as a meditation on the interrelation between rival conceptions of time. Other works subjected to extended analyses in independent essays are Richard II, Julius Caesar and Macbeth, all of which are interpreted as tragedies of language in which the paradoxes inherent in names and naming are enacted in the personal dilemmas of the protagonists. The final two essays in the volume, comparative rather than exegetical in approach, explore the intricate web of allusion linking The Tempest with Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and Jonson's The Alchemist, and consider the contribution that all three plays make to the Renaissance exploration of the role played by art and knowledge in human life.
Contents
Contents: A Bird of Another Feather. Will Shake-Scene's Belated Revenge - The Sign of the Rose. Romeo and Juliet and the Contexts of Meaning - That Bare Vowel. An I for an Ay in Romeo and Juliet - Unkind Hours and Timeless Ends. Uncomfortable Time in Romeo and Juliet - The Shakespearean Name. Variations on a Theme - The Word Against the Word. The Varieties of Linguistic Experience in Richard II - Dumb Mouths and Monarchs' Voices. Embodying Language in Julius Caesar - Imperfect Speakers. Macbeth and the Name of King - 'Burn but his books'. Rough Magic in Doctor Faustus and The Tempest - Carrying Tempest in his Hand and Voice. The Magician in Jonson and Shakespeare.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
The Author: David Lucking is Professor of English at the University of Lecce, where he teaches both English and Canadian literature. His full-length publications include The Serpent's Part: Narrating the Self in Canadian Literature, Ancestors and Gods: Margaret Laurence and the Dialectics of Identity, Plays upon the Word: Shakespeare's Drama of Language, Beyond Innocence: Literary Transformations of the Fall, and Conrad's Mysteries: Variations on an Archetypal Theme.
     Top Print Page 
© 2005 Peter Lang Publishing Group  Created by Peter Lang AG  Design by Peter Lang AG
last update: 03 September 2010  Books online: 48343