Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Plays & playwrights > 16th to 18th centuries > Shakespeare studies & criticism
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Yeats, Shakespeare, and Irish Cultural Nationalism (Paperback)
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Yeats, Shakespeare, and Irish Cultural Nationalism (Paperback)
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Yeats, Shakespeare, and Irish Cultural Nationalism examines Yeats's
writing on Shakespeare in the context of his work on behalf of the
Irish Literary Revival. While Shakespeare's verse drama provides a
source of inspiration for Yeats's poetry and plays, Yeats also
writes about Shakespeare in essays and articles promoting the
ideals of the Revival, and on behalf of Irish literary nationalism.
These prose pieces reveal Yeats thinking about Shakespeare's art
and times throughout his career, and taken together they offer a
new perspective on the contours of Yeats's cultural politics. This
book identifies three stages of Yeats's cultural nationalism, each
of which appropriates England's national poet in an idiosyncratic
manner, while reflecting contemporary trends in Shakespeare
reception. Thus Yeats's fin-de-siecle Shakespeare is a symbolist
poet and folk-artist whose pre-modern sensibility detaches him from
contemporary English culture and aligns him with the inhabitants of
Ireland's rural margins. Next, in the opening decade of the
twentieth century, following his visit to Stratford to see the
Benson history cycle, Yeats's work for the Irish National Theatre
adopts an avant-garde, occultist stagecraft to develop an Irish
dramatic repertoire capable of unifying its audience in a shared
sense of nationhood. Yeats writes frequently about Shakespeare
during this period, locating on the Elizabethan stage the kind of
transformational emotional affect he sought to recover in the Abbey
Theatre. Finally, as Ireland moves towards political independence,
Yeats turns again to Shakespeare to register his disappointment
with the social and cultural direction of the nascent Irish state.
In each case, Yeats's thinking about Shakespeare responds to the
remarkable conflation of aesthetic and religious philosophies
constituting his cultural nationalism, thus making a unique case of
Shakespearean reception. Taken together, Yeats's writings
deracinate Shakespeare, and so contribute significantly to the
process by which Shakespeare has come to be seen as a global
artist, rather than a specifically English possession.
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