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Pyramus: 'Now die, die, die, die, die.' [Dies] A Midsummer Night's
Dream 'Shakespeare's Dead' reveals the unique ways in which
Shakespeare brings dying, death, and the dead to life. It
establishes the cultural, religious and social contexts for
thinking about early modern death, with particular reference to the
plague which ravaged Britain during his lifetime, and against the
divisive background of the Reformation. But it also shows how death
on stage is different from death in real life. The dead come to
life, ghosts haunt the living, and scenes of mourning are subverted
by the fact that the supposed corpse still breathes. Shakespeare
scripts his scenes of dying with extraordinary care. Famous final
speeches - like Hamlet's 'The rest is silence', Mercutio's 'A
plague o' both your houses', or Richard III's 'My kingdom for a
horse' - are also giving crucial choices to the actors as to
exactly how and when to die. Instead of the blank finality of
death, we get a unique entrance into the loneliness or confusion of
dying. 'Shakespeare's Dead' tells of death-haunted heroes such as
Macbeth and Hamlet, and death-teasing heroines like Juliet,
Ophelia, and Cleopatra. It explores the fear of 'something after
death', and characters' terrifying visions of being dead. But it
also uncovers the constant presence of death in Shakespeare's
comedies, and how the grinning jester might be a leering skull in
disguise. This book celebrates the paradox: the life in death in
Shakespeare.
New methods are needed to do justice to Shakespeare. His work
exceeds conventional models, past and present, for understanding
playworlds. In this book, Simon Palfrey goes right to the heart of
early modern popular drama, revealing both how it works and why it
matters. Unlike his contemporaries, Shakespeare gives independent
life to all his instruments, and to every fraction and fragment of
the plays. Palfrey terms these particles 'formactions' -
theatre-specific forms that move with their own action and passion.
Palfrey's book is critically daring in both substance and format.
Its unique mix of imaginative gusto, thought experiments, and
virtuosic technique generates piercing close readings of the plays.
There is far more to playlife than meets the eye. Influenced by
Leibniz's visionary original model of possible worlds, Palfrey
opens up the multiple worlds of Shakespeare's language, scenes, and
characters as never before.
New methods are needed to do justice to Shakespeare. His work
exceeds conventional models, past and present, for understanding
playworlds. In this book, Simon Palfrey goes right to the heart of
early modern popular drama, revealing both how it works and why it
matters. Unlike his contemporaries, Shakespeare gives independent
life to all his instruments, and to every fraction and fragment of
the plays. Palfrey terms these particles 'formactions' -
theatre-specific forms that move with their own action and passion.
Palfrey's book is critically daring in both substance and format.
Its unique mix of imaginative gusto, thought experiments, and
virtuosic technique generates piercing close readings of the plays.
There is far more to playlife than meets the eye. Influenced by
Leibniz's visionary original model of possible worlds, Palfrey
opens up the multiple worlds of Shakespeare's language, scenes, and
characters as never before.
A truly groundbreaking collaboration of original theatre history
with exciting literary criticism, Shakespeare in Parts is the first
book fully to explore the original form in which Shakespeare's
drama overwhelmingly circulated. This was not the full play-text;
it was not the public performance. It was the actor's part,
consisting of the bare cues and speeches of each individual role.
With group rehearsals rare or non-existent, the cued part alone had
to furnish the actor with his character. But each such part-text
was riddled with gaps and uncertainties. The actor knew what he was
going to say, but not necessarily when, or why, or to whom; he may
have known next to nothing of any other part. It demanded the most
sensitive attention to the opportunities inscribed in the script,
and to the ongoing dramatic moment. Here is where the young actor
Shakespeare learnt his trade; here is where his imagination, verbal
and technical, learnt to roam.
This is the story of Shakespeare in Parts. As Shakespeare
developed his playwriting, the apparent limitations of the medium
get transformed into expressive opportunities. Both cue and speech
become promise-crammed repositories of meaning and movement, and of
individually discoverable space and time. Writing always for the
same core group of players, Shakespeare could take - and insist
upon - unprecedented risks. The result is onstage drama of
astonishing immediacy. Starting with a comprehensive history of the
part in early modern theatre, Simon Palfrey and Tiffany Stern's
mould-altering work of historical and imaginative recovery provides
a unique keyhole onto hitherto forgotten practices and techniques.
It not only discovers a newly active, choice-ridden actor, but a
new Shakespeare.
One of the most memorable and affecting Shakespearean characters is
Edgar in "King Lear." He has long been celebrated for his
faithfulness in the face of his father's rejection, and the scene
in which he saves his blinded father from suicide is regarded as
one of the most moving in all of Shakespeare.
In "Poor Tom," Simon Palfrey asks us to rethink all those received
ideas--and thus to experience "King Lear" as never before. He
argues that Edgar is Shakespeare's most radical experiment in
characterization--and also his most exhaustive model of both human
and theatrical possibility. The key to the Edgar-character is that
he spends most of the play disguised, much of it as "Poor Tom of
Bedlam," and his disguises come to uncanny life. The Edgar-role is
always more than one person; it animates multitudes, past and
present and future, and gives life to states of being beyond the
normal reach of the senses--undead, or not-yet, or ghostly, or
possible rather than actual. And because the Edgar-role both
connects and retunes all of the figures and scenes in the play, a
close attention to this particular part can shine stunning new
light on how the whole play works.
The ultimate message of Palfrey's bravura analysis is the same for
readers or actors or audiences as it is for the characters in the
play: see and listen feelingly; pay attention, especially when it
seems as though there is nothing there.
A truly groundbreaking collaboration of original theatre history
with exciting literary criticism, Shakespeare in Parts is the first
book fully to explore the original form in which Shakespeare's
drama overwhelmingly circulated. This was not the full play-text;
it was not the public performance. It was the actor's part,
consisting of the bare cues and speeches of each individual role.
With group rehearsals rare or non-existent, the cued part alone had
to furnish the actor with his character. But each such part-text
was riddled with gaps and uncertainties. The actor knew what he was
going to say, but not necessarily when, or why, or to whom; he may
have known next to nothing of any other part. It demanded the most
sensitive attention to the opportunities inscribed in the script,
and to the ongoing dramatic moment. Here is where the young actor
Shakespeare learnt his trade; here is where his imagination, verbal
and technical, learnt to roam. This is the story of Shakespeare in
Parts. As Shakespeare developed his playwriting, the apparent
limitations of the medium get transformed into expressive
opportunities. Both cue and speech become promise-crammed
repositories of meaning and movement, and of individually
discoverable space and time. Writing always for the same core group
of players, Shakespeare could take - and insist upon -
unprecedented risks. The result is onstage drama of astonishing
immediacy. Starting with a comprehensive history of the part in
early modern theatre, Simon Palfrey and Tiffany Stern's
mould-altering work of historical and imaginative recovery provides
a unique keyhole onto hitherto forgotten practices and techniques.
It not only discovers a newly active, choice-ridden actor, but a
new Shakespeare.
Shakespeare's late plays are usually seen in terms of courtliness
and escapism. But the critical tradition has been too decorous.
Neither neo-Christian pieties nor high-political allegory can
account for the works' audacity and surprise, or the popular
investment in both their form and meaning. Post-structuralist and
historicist approaches show the indeterminacy and materiality of
language, but rarely identify how particular figures (words and
characters) capture and energise contested history. Recent
criticism tends to put a pre-emptive `master-paradigm' above all
else; a more sinuous, minutely attentive critical vocabulary is
needed to apprehend Shakespeare's turbulent, precise, teeming
metaphorical discourse. Late Shakespeare: A New World of Words
reappraises the origins of authority, language, and decorum, and
the prospects for each. Through his portrayal of `popular'
desire--in his rustics, clowns, rogues, slaves, women--Shakespeare
presents worlds which explore the meaning of the `subject', and the
potential for effective transformatory agency. Rather than a
Jonsonian (or perhaps earlier Shakespearian) verisimilitude, with
each person discrete and verifiable, Shakespeare's characters
embody metaphor-in-process; like the revamped romance genre itself,
they `take on' surrounding turbulence. The plays show the stormy
consequences of hegemonic violence. The subsequent exile to
wilderness allows for contingent novelty: new liberties are tested
amid the wreckage or recapitulation of old forms. The plays pit
possible sources of regeneration (romantic pastoral, semi-populist
humanism) against more primal violence and rebelliousness. Finally,
the book argues against a conventional sense of the plays' movement
towards divinely sanctioned closure; mischief, irony, polysemy
remain; romance's political problems are competitive, multiple, and
tumescently unpredictable.
Late Shakespeare presents a new vision of character, metaphor, and politics in the late plays. It closely analyses Shakespeare's use of language and genre, showing how the plays revamp theatrical decorums. These plays are not courtly, sober, and escapist, as their reputation suggests. They are peculiarly sensitive to the turbulent, unfinished quality of his historical moment. In both court and wilderness, Shakespeare analyses the violence of authority, the tensions in language, and the origin and prospects of both.
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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