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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Theodore LeinwandPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 1.60cm , Height: 0.10cm , Length: 2.30cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9780226527628ISBN 10: 022652762 Pages: 239 Publication Date: 16 November 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews-The Great William--which at one point imagines Shakespeare as a gigantic walking ear taking in all the words of his world--shows us the strange, often wild life that the playwright's own words lived in the ears and minds of seven uncommon readers. Leinwand catches beautifully the distinct colors of voice, and the distinctly Shakespearean touch, in each of his authors. One comes away from this probing, continually surprising study with a more urgent sense of how any of us engage with Shakespeare's texts, conversing with them in the margins and in our memories.---Kenneth Gross, author of Shylock Is Shakespeare A powerful and subtle investigation of seven 'writers reading Shakespeare'....Leinwand turns up a remarkable number of connections between his chosen writers, who include Coleridge, Keats, and Virginia Woolf; all of them engage adventurously with the lively immediacy of Shakespeare's writing. -- Times Literary Supplement Leinwand captures the intellectual and spiritual urgency with which these writers read Shakespeare, but he also shows that their reading was a profoundly embodied experience. -- SEL: Studies in English Literature Leinwand's attention. . .an attention that is intimate, subtle, mercurial, and scrupulously scholarly--gives a quickened texture to this fascinating, moving book. -- Shakespeare Quarterly Leinwand's close readings are intense and insightful. . . . The result is a smart, readable book. . . . Highly recommended. -- Choice Leinwand's book is first-rate, a pleasure to read, and one of the smartest and most engaging studies to have crossed my desk in a very long time. It is also rich in archival discoveries, steeped in biographical insight, and deeply knowledgeable about the ways in which great writers have read and responded to Shakespeare. I learned a great deal from every chapter and can't imagine a reader who wouldn't. --James Shapiro, Columbia University The Great William--which at one point imagines Shakespeare as a gigantic walking ear taking in all the words of his world--shows us the strange, often wild life that the playwright's own words lived in the ears and minds of seven uncommon readers. Leinwand catches beautifully the distinct colors of voice, and the distinctly Shakespearean touch, in each of his authors. One comes away from this probing, continually surprising study with a more urgent sense of how any of us engage with Shakespeare's texts, conversing with them in the margins and in our memories. --Kenneth Gross, author of Shylock Is Shakespeare Intelligent and insightful. . . . The Great William is an important book and it feels like a landmark not just in terms of Shakespeare criticism but also in terms of how we think about writers reading writers. Theodore Leinwand is an astute and unfailingly courteous guide to the sub ject. He is also often a brilliant critic, undoubtedly inspired by all the careful reading he has under taken. . . . His prose is imaginative and enjoyable, packed with insights, as befits a critic who is acutely aware of the close links between critical and creative writing. -- PN Review Leinwand has written not a study of influence, as we've come to understand the word, but a study of the actual mechanisms of inspiration--an account of how the highest verbal artistry nurses the future of art, preventing nothing. What's more, he has done so without reliance on any sentimental notion of what constitutes Shakespeare's inimitable greatness. Meticulously researched, seductively narrated, The Great William is a book about (in Proust's phrase) the 'original psychological act of reading.' --James Longenbach, University of Rochester What an illuminating book! With great acuity, scrupulous research, and learned determination, Leinwand studies and describes how some of our most notable writers contend with Shakespeare, urgently probing his work, catalyzing their own. The Great William teaches us a great deal about Shakespeare, about seven master literary eccentrics, and about ourselves as readers. --Edward Hirsch, author of A Poet's Glossary As a story of readings, The Great William is a true browser's paradise. The author is not only a sympathetic reader of others reading Shakespeare but is himself also a vigorously sympathetic reader of the bard and the hold his words continue to possess. . .this constantly inventive book deserves a long, rich, active shelf life. -- Modern Philolgy Author InformationTheodore Leinwand is professor of English at the University of Maryland. He is the author of The City Staged and Theatre, Finance, and Society in Early Modern England, as well as a consulting editor for Shakespeare Quarterly. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |