Book contents
- Frontmatter
- King Lear: A Retrospect, 1980–2000
- How Shakespeare Knew King Leir
- Contracts of Love and Affection: Lear, Old Age, and Kingship
- Headgear as a Paralinguistic Signifier in King Lear
- What becomes of the broken-hearted: King Lear and the Dissociation of Sensibility
- Lear’s Afterlife
- Songs of Madness: The Lyric Afterlife of Shakespeare’s Poor Tom
- Secularizing King Lear: Shakespeare, Tate, and the Sacred
- ‘Look on her, look’: The Apotheosis of Cordelia
- Jacob Gordin’s Mirele Efros: King Lear as Jewish Mother
- ‘How fine a play was Mrs Lear’: The Case for Gordon Bottomley’s King Lear's Wife
- Some Lears
- King Lear and Endgame
- Shakespeare in Pain: Edward Bond’s Lear and the Ghosts of History
- ‘Think about Shakespeare’: King Lear on Pacific Cliffs
- Actors, Editors, and the Annotation of Shakespearian Playscripts
- Titus Andronicus: The Classical Presence
- Julius Caesar, Machiavelli, and the Uses of History
- Scepticism and Theatre in Macbeth
- Revels End, and the Gentle Body Starts
- ‘Taking just care of the impression’: Editorial Intervention in Shakespeare's Fourth Folio, 1685
- ‘A world elsewhere’: Shakespeare in South Africa
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2001
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles January–December 2000
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies (1) and (2)
- Books Received
- Index
King Lear and Endgame
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- King Lear: A Retrospect, 1980–2000
- How Shakespeare Knew King Leir
- Contracts of Love and Affection: Lear, Old Age, and Kingship
- Headgear as a Paralinguistic Signifier in King Lear
- What becomes of the broken-hearted: King Lear and the Dissociation of Sensibility
- Lear’s Afterlife
- Songs of Madness: The Lyric Afterlife of Shakespeare’s Poor Tom
- Secularizing King Lear: Shakespeare, Tate, and the Sacred
- ‘Look on her, look’: The Apotheosis of Cordelia
- Jacob Gordin’s Mirele Efros: King Lear as Jewish Mother
- ‘How fine a play was Mrs Lear’: The Case for Gordon Bottomley’s King Lear's Wife
- Some Lears
- King Lear and Endgame
- Shakespeare in Pain: Edward Bond’s Lear and the Ghosts of History
- ‘Think about Shakespeare’: King Lear on Pacific Cliffs
- Actors, Editors, and the Annotation of Shakespearian Playscripts
- Titus Andronicus: The Classical Presence
- Julius Caesar, Machiavelli, and the Uses of History
- Scepticism and Theatre in Macbeth
- Revels End, and the Gentle Body Starts
- ‘Taking just care of the impression’: Editorial Intervention in Shakespeare's Fourth Folio, 1685
- ‘A world elsewhere’: Shakespeare in South Africa
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2001
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles January–December 2000
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies (1) and (2)
- Books Received
- Index
Summary
In Shakespeare our Contemporary (translated 1964), Jan Kott headed one chapter ‘ King Lear or Endgame’. In so doing, he invited readers to think of Shakespeare’s play in terms of Samuel Beckett’s absurdist drama, first performed in 1957. He argued that in the ‘new theatre’ of Beckett, Dürenmatt, and Ionesco, tragedy had been replaced by the grotesque: ‘Grotesque means tragedy re-written in different terms’ ; the hero still loses his ‘struggle against the absolute’, an absolute that is confirmed in tragedy but mocked and desecrated in the grotesque. Kott’s example of such tragedy is Sophocles’ Antigone, where the heroine ‘is doomed to choose between human and divine order’, and, he says, ‘The tragic situation becomes grotesque when both alternatives of the choice imposed are absurd, irrelevant, or compromising’ (p. 108). Hence ‘Tragedy is the theatre of priests, grotesque is the theatre of clowns’ (p. 113). Kott leaps from this definition into an account of the scene of Gloucester’s mock suicide in King Lear, identifying Gloucester as Everyman wandering through a world in which ‘both the medieval and renaissance orders of established values disintegrate’ (p. 118), and we are left with the earth, bleeding and empty. So the theme of King Lear ‘is the decay and fall of the world’ (p. 123), and is focused in the relationship in this scene between Edgar and Gloucester, which he links with that of Pozzo and Lucky in Waiting for Godot.
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- Information
- Shakespeare SurveyAn Annual Survey of Shakespeare Studies and Production, pp. 153 - 158Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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