Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Plays & playwrights > 16th to 18th centuries > Shakespeare studies & criticism
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The Connell Guide To Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra (Paperback)
Loot Price: R250
Discovery Miles 2 500
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The Connell Guide To Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra (Paperback)
Series: The Connell Guide To ...
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List price R265
Loot Price R250
Discovery Miles 2 500
You Save R15 (6%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Writers, playwrights and philosophers have alike been fascinated by
Shakespeare's Cleopatra. The contradictions in her character, said
the writer Anna Jameson, fuse "into one brilliant impersonation of
classical elegance, Oriental voluptuousness, and gipsy sorcery".
When Henry James sought to suggest the charm cast over an
impressionable but repressed American by a glamorous Parisian
countess, it was Cleopatra's "infinite variety" to which he had
recourse. There are two obvious reasons, says Adrian Poole, why the
play has enjoyed a great leap in popularity and interest since the
early 20th century. One is changing attitudes to gender and
sexuality, and the relaxing of some of the taboos impeding the
liberation of women from the confinements and distinctions in force
at least since the Restoration. The other is changing conceptions
of theatre. The advent of cinema encouraged lighter, swifter and
more flexible forms of staging. One can scarcely think of a
Shakespeare play that benefits more from such a liberation. But
there are other less obvious reasons. One is the opposition between
love and romance on the one hand and politics and war on the other
- the play's complex re-working of some age-old myths about Venus
and Mars. As our own media daily insist, at least in the anglophone
world, the love-affairs of the top dogs are matters of public
interest. The fate of all those men and women sacrificed "to solder
up the rift" between Antony and Caesar does hang on what happens,
or fails to happen, behind the scenes. No play conveys this better
than Antony and Cleopatra.
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