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Overview"Shakespeare, like Bottom in ""A Midsummer Night's Dream"", is a weaver. The playwright spins a web of his explicit and implicit narrative and dramatic sources, historical and cultural prompts, and other multifaceted intertexts woven into the fabric of his comedies, tragedies and histories. This study highlights some examples of largely unrecognized and sometimes subtle strands of Shakespeare's intertextual tapestries in selected plays. Such intertexts represent mostly conscious and adapted sources that when considered help to contribute fresh understandings of the plays examined. Murray Levith analyses a number of types of Shakespearean intertextual prompts which are embedded in or cue selected works: an unrecognized dramatic source as a prompt for ""The Merchant of Venice""; images in ""Coriolanus"" and ""The Merry Wives of Windsor"" likely remembered from a favourite Latin classic; ""A Midsummer Night's Dream"" and a quasi-historical legend; Shakespeare's use of the myth of St George and the Dragon in ""Richard III"" and a contemporary political prompt in ""Othello""; a final chapter notes examples of Shakespeare's recycling and views :All's Well that Ends Well's"" relationship to ""The Taming of the Shrew.""" Full Product DetailsAuthor: Murray J. LevithPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd. Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 13.80cm Weight: 0.277kg ISBN: 9780826495976ISBN 10: 0826495974 Pages: 128 Publication Date: 01 May 2007 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsThere is little steelcage battling these days between Shakespeare critics and there has been so much done that it is difficult to come up with something truly new and interesting, granted....I encourage Shakespearian scholars with fresh and important material to submit some manuscripts of great importance to this established and worthy publisher - Chronique--Leonard R.N. Ashley There is little steelcage battling these days between Shakespeare critics and there has been so much done that it is difficult to come up with something truly new and interesting, granted....I encourage Shakespearian scholars with fresh and important material to submit some manuscripts of great importance to this established and worthy publisher - Chronique--, Title mentioned in Oxford Journals Clippings: The Year's Work in English Studies, 2009 There is little steelcage battling these days between Shakespeare critics and there has been so much done that it is difficult to come up with something truly new and interesting, granted....I encourage Shakespearian scholars with fresh and important material to submit some manuscripts of great importance to this established and worthy publisher - Chronique--Sanford Lakoff 'Explores intertextual aspects of Shakespeare's plays, including his allusions to other works and legends, and his recycling of his own work as in links between All Well's That End's Well and The Taming of the Shrew .' Chronicle of Higher Education , October 12, 2007 Author InformationMurray J. Levith is Professor of English at Skidmore College, New York, where he has taught Shakespeare for more than thirty-five years. His many publications include Shakespeare's Italian Settings and Plays (author) and A Historical Survey of Shakespeare in China (editor). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |