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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David M. BergeronPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9781793631688ISBN 10: 1793631689 Pages: 254 Publication Date: 14 October 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"At a time when the collected letters of famous authors attract ever larger numbers of readers, David Bergeron makes up for the lack of any surviving letters from William Shakespeare by gathering together in Shakespeare Through Letters all the letters Shakespeare introduces into his comedies, histories, and tragedies. Drawing on the skills of close reading and sympathetic imagination displayed in his books on pageantry, patronage, and James I's personal letters, Bergeron here opens up ""the experience of letters"" - experience that embraces characters within the fictions, actors on the stage, spectators in the theater, and ""the great variety of readers"" of Shakespeare's printed texts. --Bruce R. Smith, University of Southern California, author of Phenomenal Shakespeare Combining scholarly expertise in early modern correspondence with a lifetime spent teaching, David Bergeron is uniquely qualified to guide us through the letters that permeate Shakespeare's plays - letters that inform, amuse, woo, lie, betray; letters that are delivered, miscarried, read, unread, torn, burned, filed for posterity. In the first study to address every play in the canon, Bergeron shows how to use the letters as an entry point to understanding Shakespeare's craft, and thus the dramas he crafted. With clear, accessible, yet penetrating analyses of each play, Bergeron demonstrates beyond doubt that if we know our letters, we'll know our Shakespeare. --Alan Stewart, Columbia University, author of Shakespeare's Letters Shakespeare through Letters is at its best when we see it as an innovative way to view almost all of Shake-speare's works, and one that requires the sweeping gaze and long experience of a scholar like Bergeron. -- ""SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500-1900""" At a time when the collected letters of famous authors attract ever larger numbers of readers, David Bergeron makes up for the lack of any surviving letters from William Shakespeare by gathering together in Shakespeare Through Letters all the letters Shakespeare introduces into his comedies, histories, and tragedies. Drawing on the skills of close reading and sympathetic imagination displayed in his books on pageantry, patronage, and James I's personal letters, Bergeron here opens up the experience of letters - experience that embraces characters within the fictions, actors on the stage, spectators in the theater, and the great variety of readers of Shakespeare's printed texts.--Bruce R. Smith, University of Southern California, author of Phenomenal Shakespeare Combining scholarly expertise in early modern correspondence with a lifetime spent teaching, David Bergeron is uniquely qualified to guide us through the letters that permeate Shakespeare's plays - letters that inform, amuse, woo, lie, betray; letters that are delivered, miscarried, read, unread, torn, burned, filed for posterity. In the first study to address every play in the canon, Bergeron shows how to use the letters as an entry point to understanding Shakespeare's craft, and thus the dramas he crafted. With clear, accessible, yet penetrating analyses of each play, Bergeron demonstrates beyond doubt that if we know our letters, we'll know our Shakespeare.--Alan Stewart, Columbia University, author of Shakespeare's Letters ""Shakespeare through Letters is at its best when we see it as an innovative way to view almost all of Shake-speare's works, and one that requires the sweeping gaze and long experience of a scholar like Bergeron."" --SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 ""Combining scholarly expertise in early modern correspondence with a lifetime spent teaching, David Bergeron is uniquely qualified to guide us through the letters that permeate Shakespeare's plays - letters that inform, amuse, woo, lie, betray; letters that are delivered, miscarried, read, unread, torn, burned, filed for posterity. In the first study to address every play in the canon, Bergeron shows how to use the letters as an entry point to understanding Shakespeare's craft, and thus the dramas he crafted. With clear, accessible, yet penetrating analyses of each play, Bergeron demonstrates beyond doubt that if we know our letters, we'll know our Shakespeare."" --Alan Stewart, Columbia University, author of Shakespeare's Letters ""At a time when the collected letters of famous authors attract ever larger numbers of readers, David Bergeron makes up for the lack of any surviving letters from William Shakespeare by gathering together in Shakespeare Through Letters all the letters Shakespeare introduces into his comedies, histories, and tragedies. Drawing on the skills of close reading and sympathetic imagination displayed in his books on pageantry, patronage, and James I's personal letters, Bergeron here opens up ""the experience of letters"" - experience that embraces characters within the fictions, actors on the stage, spectators in the theater, and ""the great variety of readers"" of Shakespeare's printed texts."" --Bruce R. Smith, University of Southern California, author of Phenomenal Shakespeare At a time when the collected letters of famous authors attract ever larger numbers of readers, David Bergeron makes up for the lack of any surviving letters from William Shakespeare by gathering together in Shakespeare Through Letters all the letters Shakespeare introduces into his comedies, histories, and tragedies. Drawing on the skills of close reading and sympathetic imagination displayed in his books on pageantry, patronage, and James I's personal letters, Bergeron here opens up ""the experience of letters"" - experience that embraces characters within the fictions, actors on the stage, spectators in the theater, and ""the great variety of readers"" of Shakespeare's printed texts. Combining scholarly expertise in early modern correspondence with a lifetime spent teaching, David Bergeron is uniquely qualified to guide us through the letters that permeate Shakespeare's plays - letters that inform, amuse, woo, lie, betray; letters that are delivered, miscarried, read, unread, torn, burned, filed for posterity. In the first study to address every play in the canon, Bergeron shows how to use the letters as an entry point to understanding Shakespeare's craft, and thus the dramas he crafted. With clear, accessible, yet penetrating analyses of each play, Bergeron demonstrates beyond doubt that if we know our letters, we'll know our Shakespeare. Shakespeare through Letters is at its best when we see it as an innovative way to view almost all of Shake-speare's works, and one that requires the sweeping gaze and long experience of a scholar like Bergeron. Author InformationDavid M. Bergeron is professor emeritus of English at University of Kansas. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |