Rhetorical Readings, Dark Comedies, and Shakespeare's Problem Plays

Author:   Ira Clark
Publisher:   University Press of Florida
ISBN:  

9780813030401


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   25 March 2007
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Rhetorical Readings, Dark Comedies, and Shakespeare's Problem Plays


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Overview

In the very early 1600s, Shakespeare began writing plays that have proved troubling for audiences. """"Measure for Measure"""", """"All's Well That Ends Well"""", and """"Troilus and Cressida"""" came to be known as the """"the problem plays"""" - ostensibly written as comedies but without a clear comic resolution. Clark argues that the key to understanding these complicated works is discovering their most prominent rhetorical features. This book is the first to frame the discussion in terms of rhetorically based readings. Drawing upon a wide base of reading in late Tudor-early Stuart drama, Clark offers a formal anatomy of the """"problem play"""" genre, which serves as a primary context for reading the three plays. He also resuscitates the methodological resources of new formalism in light of more recent theoretical approaches - not only through his reexamination of the historiography of dramatic genre but also through his foregrounding of the history and theory of rhetoric. In a departure from the approaches of other rhetorical studies in early modern literature, Clark emphasizes the actual readings of literary texts rather than the history of rhetorical theory, offering useful summaries of scholarship on particular aspects of rhetoric in the period (particularly the chiasmus and the gnomic sententium) in support of close readings. He employs the language of early modern rhetoric to demonstrate what others have approached through different means - the artful fusion of """"matter and manner"""" in Shakespeare's writing - and provides a set of case studies that will be especially useful for teachers of Shakespeare in undergraduate classrooms, where formal patterns can often provide verifiably significant places of entry into a text.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ira Clark
Publisher:   University Press of Florida
Imprint:   University Press of Florida
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.353kg
ISBN:  

9780813030401


ISBN 10:   0813030404
Pages:   160
Publication Date:   25 March 2007
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

The most detailed recent examination of the category of the problem play, Clark's book stands as perhaps the only monograph-length work in recent years entirely devoted to rhetorical readings of early modern literary texts. -- Douglas Pfeiffer


""The most detailed recent examination of the category of the problem play, Clark's book stands as perhaps the only monograph-length work in recent years entirely devoted to rhetorical readings of early modern literary texts."" -- Douglas Pfeiffer


Author Information

Ira Clark is professor of English at the University of Florida and the author of four previous books, most recently Comedy, Youth, Manhood in Early Modern England.

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