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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: András Kiséry (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, The City College of New York, CUNY)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.80cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.522kg ISBN: 9780198822264ISBN 10: 019882226 Pages: 340 Publication Date: 05 April 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Hamlet's Moment Part I: Hamlet and the Profession of Politics 1: 'The Wiser Sort': The Distinction of Politics and Gabriel Harvey's Machiavellian Hamlet 2: Some Travellers Return: Diplomatic Writing, Political Careers, and the World of Hamlet 3: 'I Lack Advancement': Political Agents and Political Servants in Hamlet's Moment Part II: Political Knowledge and the Public Stage in Hamlet's Moment 4: 'Vile and Vulgar Admirations': Chapman and the Public of Political News 5: 'The Most Matter with Best Conceyt': The Publics of Tacitean Observation and the Margins of Politics in Jonson's Sejanus 6: 'For Discourse's Sake Merely': Political Conversation on the Stage and Off BibliographyReviewsThis is a book that readers will want to ponder carefully, both for its meticulous organization of detail and for its intelligent and judicious critical synthesis of important elements of a current interdisciplinary debate in Early Modern Studies. * John Drakakis, Modern Language Review * meticulous reference to notebooks, diaries, and annotations of the play's original audience ... he also shows that Hamlet itself depicts and explores a shift in the perspective on politics from one generation to another. * Bart van Es, Times Literary Supplement * Hamlet's Moment is, in the best sense, a densely contextualist account of the nature and function of drama's political discourse at the turn of the seventeenth century. Acutely attentive to the most recent scholarship in early modern political history, this intellectually ambitious book sets out to link social, intellectual, and literary history by examining the circulation of knowledge in print and manuscript, in professional and fictional forms and to attend to the interest in, and utility of, this circulation in a particular historical moment (22-3). That moment, Kisery argues, was characterized by a new interest in the drama of statecraft, one that offered an entirely novel understanding of politics specifically as a profession (4; 1)... In sum, this book makes an important contribution to both literary and historical studies and proves that we really did need another book about Hamlet. * Dympna Callaghan, Shakespeare Jahrbuch * a painstakingly researched study of something that is incredibly hard to say something new about: Renaissance drama and politics. But Kisery does it ... Hamlet's Moment shows through a series of detailed case studies - all of which display a sophisticated knowledge of book history, intellectual history, and literary form - how Renaissance drama around 1600 familiarized English audiences with the emergent notion of politics as a profession. * Kevin Curran, Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 * This is a book that readers will want to ponder carefully, both for its meticulous organization of detail and for its intelligent and judicious critical synthesis of important elements of a current interdisciplinary debate in Early Modern Studies. * John Drakakis, Modern Language Review * meticulous reference to notebooks, diaries, and annotations of the play's original audience ... he also shows that Hamlet itself depicts and explores a shift in the perspective on politics from one generation to another. * Bart van Es, Times Literary Supplement * Hamlet's Moment is, in the best sense, a densely contextualist account of the nature and function of drama's political discourse at the turn of the seventeenth century. Acutely attentive to the most recent scholarship in early modern political history, this intellectually ambitious book sets out to link social, intellectual, and literary history by examining the circulation of knowledge in print and manuscript, in professional and fictional forms and to attend to the interest in, and utility of, this circulation in a particular historical moment (22-3). That moment, Kisery argues, was characterized by a new interest in the drama of statecraft, one that offered an entirely novel understanding of politics specifically as a profession (4; 1)... In sum, this book makes an important contribution to both literary and historical studies and proves that we really did need another book about Hamlet. * Dympna Callaghan, Shakespeare Jahrbuch * a painstakingly researched study of something that is incredibly hard to say something new about: Renaissance drama and politics. But Kisery does it ... Hamlet's Moment shows through a series of detailed case studies - all of which display a sophisticated knowledge of book history, intellectual history, and literary form - how Renaissance drama around 1600 familiarized English audiences with the emergent notion of politics as a profession. * Kevin Curran, Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 * A provocative monograph from which one learns much * Nick Myers, Cahier 'Elisabe thains: A journal of English Renaissance Studies * A particularly appealing feature of Kisery's writing is his generous sign posting and cross-referencing, which skillfully guide the readers' attention to subtle details and connections. Despite the occasional lengthy sentences, Kisery's book is written in a lively, often entertaining, sometimes even ironic, but always lucid academic prose. ... For anyone who is interested in early modern political thought and practice, print and manuscript culture, and, above all, drama, it is worth following Kisery on his journey with these ambassadors. * Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies * "A particularly appealing feature of Kis´ery's writing is his generous sign posting and cross-referencing, which skillfully guide the readers' attention to subtle details and connections. Despite the occasional lengthy sentences, Kis´ery's book is written in a lively, often entertaining, sometimes even ironic, but always lucid academic prose. ... For anyone who is interested in early modern political thought and practice, print and manuscript culture, and, above all, drama, it is worth following Kis´ery on his journey with these ambassadors. * Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies * A provocative monograph from which one learns much * Nick Myers, Cahier 'Elisabé thains: A journal of English Renaissance Studies * a painstakingly researched study of something that is incredibly hard to say something new about: Renaissance drama and politics. But Kiséry does it ... Hamlet's Moment shows through a series of detailed case studies -- all of which display a sophisticated knowledge of book history, intellectual history, and literary form -- how Renaissance drama around 1600 familiarized English audiences with the emergent notion of politics as a profession. * Kevin Curran, Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 * Hamlet's Moment is, in the best sense, a densely contextualist account of the nature and function of drama's political discourse at the turn of the seventeenth century. Acutely attentive to the most recent scholarship in early modern political history, this intellectually ambitious book sets out to ""link social, intellectual, and literary history by examining the circulation of knowledge in print and manuscript, in professional and fictional forms"" and to attend ""to the interest in, and utility of, this circulation in a particular historical moment"" (22-3). That moment, Kiséry argues, was characterized by a new interest in the drama of statecraft, one that offered an entirely novel understanding of politics specifically as a profession (4; 1)... In sum, this book makes an important contribution to both literary and historical studies and proves that we really did need another book about Hamlet. * Dympna Callaghan, Shakespeare Jahrbuch * meticulous reference to notebooks, diaries, and annotations of the play's original audience ... he also shows that Hamlet itself depicts and explores a shift in the perspective on politics from one generation to another. * Bart van Es, Times Literary Supplement * This is a book that readers will want to ponder carefully, both for its meticulous organization of detail and for its intelligent and judicious critical synthesis of important elements of a current interdisciplinary debate in Early Modern Studies. * John Drakakis, Modern Language Review *" Author InformationAndrás Kiséry is Associate Professor of English at The City College of New York (CUNY). He is co-editor of Formal Matters: Reading the Materials of English Renaissance Literature (Manchester University Press, 2013). He has published articles about early modern English literature in the contexts of political culture and the history of the book in European Journal of English Studies, Philological Quarterly, and English Literary History. He is writing a book about the influence of the national and international topographies of the book-trade on the production and reception of early modern English writing called 'Books, Space, and English Literature'. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |