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Overview""Shakespeare and the Nature of Women"", first published in 1975, inaugurated a new wave of feminist scholarship. It claimed that Shakespeare's plays offered a sustained critique of inherited male thinking about women, theological, literary and social. The book argued that the presence of the boy actor in Shakespeare's theatre created an awareness of gender as performance. Almost 30 years on, it continues to be a useful resource in writing about women in this period and a springboard for new research. Full Product DetailsAuthor: J. DusinberrePublisher: Palgrave USA Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan Edition: Third Edition 2003 Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.601kg ISBN: 9781403917287ISBN 10: 1403917280 Pages: 329 Publication Date: 16 September 2003 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General/trade , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Preface to the Third Edition Preface to the Second Edition Introduction The Idea of Chastity The Problem of Equality Gods and Devils Femininity and Masculinity Shakespeare Works Cited IndexReviewsDusinberre not only offers provocative and fresh readings of Shakespeare's plays, but has changed the very terms through which scholars study the theatrical culture of early modern London. --Jean Howard, Columbia University<br> 'Shakespeare and the Nature of Women gives a voice not just to women in Shakespeare but to women in Shakespeare studies. It's a courageous, feisty, intellectually ambitious and beautifully written book that, having launched the Shakespeare revolution for women a generation ago, remains just as challenging for readers today. A classic.' - Professor Carol Rutter, Department of English and Theatre Studies, University of Warwick 'First published in 1975, Dusinberre's boldly pathbreaking book helped establish the field of feminist Shakespeare studies. With its wideranging attention to gender ideology and to the complex conditions of theatrical performance on the early modern stage, Shakespeare and the Nature of Women has continued to influence generations of scholars, readers, and actors. An insightful and impassioned critic, Dusinberre not only offers provocative and fresh readings of Shakespeare's plays but has changed the very terms through which scholars study the theatrical culture of early modern London.' - Professor Jean Howard, Department of English, Columbia University 'Shakespeare and the Nature of Women is a seminal book in feminist literary criticism and Shakespeare Studies. Written by a critic of international standing, its combination of original scholarship with innovative feminist cultural analysis demonstrated the centrality of a peculiar, even paradoxical conception of female identity to the Shakespearean dramatic tradition and established an immensely rich tradition of feminist criticism of Shakespeare. Its argument is just as fresh, exciting and thought-provoking today as when it was first written. Indeed, Dusinberre's work is of vital importance in current debates about the complex cultural phenomenon of the boy actor.' - Dr Pippa Berry, King's College, University of Cambridge 'Shakespeare and the Nature of Women gives a voice not just to women in Shakespeare but to women in Shakespeare studies. It's a courageous, feisty, intellectually ambitious and beautifully written book that, having launched the Shakespeare revolution for women a generation ago, remains just as challenging for readers today. A classic.' - Professor Carol Rutter, Department of English and Theatre Studies, University of Warwick 'First published in 1975, Dusinberre's boldly pathbreaking book helped establish the field of feminist Shakespeare studies. With its wideranging attention to gender ideology and to the complex conditions of theatrical performance on the early modern stage, Shakespeare and the Nature of Women has continued to influence generations of scholars, readers, and actors. An insightful and impassioned critic, Dusinberre not only offers provocative and fresh readings of Shakespeare's plays but has changed the very terms through which scholars study the theatrical culture of early modern London.' - Professor Jean Howard, Department of English, Columbia University 'Shakespeare and the Nature of Women is a seminal book in feminist literary criticism and Shakespeare Studies. Written by a critic of international standing, its combination of original scholarship with innovative feminist cultural analysis demonstrated the centrality of a peculiar, even paradoxical conception of female identity to the Shakespearean dramatic tradition and established an immensely rich tradition of feminist criticism of Shakespeare. Its argument is just as fresh, exciting and thought-provoking today as when it was first written. Indeed, Dusinberre's work is of vital importance in current debates about the complex cultural phenomenon of the boy actor.' - Dr Pippa Berry, King's College, University of Cambridge Author InformationJULIET DUSINBERRE has lectured and published in Japan, the USA, Australia, Germany, France and Sweden. She is currently editing As You Like It for Arden 3. Other work includes Alice to the Lighthouse (1987) and Virginia Woolf's Renaissance: Woman Reader or Common Reader? (1997). She is a Fellow of Girton College, Cambridge. 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