Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Plays & playwrights > 16th to 18th centuries > Shakespeare studies & criticism
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Shakespeare's Body Language - Shaming Gestures and Gender Politics on the Renaissance Stage (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,132
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Shakespeare's Body Language - Shaming Gestures and Gender Politics on the Renaissance Stage (Hardcover)
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Why do the Capulets bite their thumbs at the Montagues? Why do the
Venetians spit upon Shylock's Jewish gaberdine? What is it about
Volumnia's act of kneeling that convinces Coriolanus not to assault
the city of Rome? Shakespeare's Body Language is a ground-breaking
new study of Shakespearean drama, revealing the previously unseen
history of social tensions found within the performance of gestures
- and how such gestures are used to shame those within the body
politic of early modern England. The first full study of shaming
gestures in Shakespearean drama, this book establishes how shame is
often rooted in the gendered expectations of the Renaissance era.
Exploring how the performance of gestures such as figging, the
cuckold's horns, and even the in-action of stillness created
shaming spectacles on the early modern stage and its wider society,
Shakespeare's Body Language argues that gestures are embodied
social metaphors which epitomise the personal as political. It
reveals the tensions of everyday life as key motivators behind the
actions of Shakespeare's characters, and considers how honour and
its opposite, shame, are constructed in terms of gender norms.
Featuring in-depth analyses of plays across Shakespeare's career,
this book explores how the playwright's understanding of shame and
humiliation is rooted in performance anxiety and gender politics,
explaining how theatrical gestures can create dramatic tension in a
way that words alone cannot. It offers both rich insights into the
early modern context of Shakespeare's drama and confirms the
startling relevance of his work to modern audiences.
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