Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Plays & playwrights > 16th to 18th centuries > Shakespeare studies & criticism
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Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet (Paperback)
Loot Price: R215
Discovery Miles 2 150
You Save: R50
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Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet (Paperback)
Series: The Connell Guide To ...
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List price R265
Loot Price R215
Discovery Miles 2 150
You Save R50 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Romeo and Juliet is routinely called "the world's greatest love
story", as though it is all about romance. The play features some
of the most lyrical passages in all of drama, and the lovers are
young, beautiful, and ardent. But when we look at the play, the
lyricism and the romance are not really what drive things along. It
is true that Romeo, especially early on in the play, acts like a
young man determined to take his place in an immortal tale of love.
Everything he says is romantic - but rather like an anniversary
card is romantic. His words propel nothing, or nothing but
sarcastic admonitions from his friends to forget about love and to
treat women as they should be treated, with careless physical
appetite. The world we have entered is rapacious more than
romantic. Everyone knows something of this, from the film versions
of the story if nothing else. Romeo and Juliet must fight for their
love inside a culture of stupid hatreds. But it is not a simple
case of love versus war, or the city against the couple. If it
were, it would nicely reinforce cliches about true love, fighting
against the odds. In this book Simon Palfrey suggests that the play
Shakespeare actually wrote is more troubling than this. Juliet's
passion - for all her youth, for all its truth - is at the very
cusp of murderousness. Juliet is the world's scourge, in the sense
that she will whip and punish and haunt it; she is also its
triumph, in the sense of its best and truest thing. The deaths her
love leads to are in no way avoidable, and in no way accidental.
They are her inheritance, the thing she was born to. Of course she
takes Romeo with her. But it is at heart her play.
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