Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Restoring Shakespeare: The Modern Editor’s Task
- Suggestions Towards an Edition of Shakespeare for French, German and Other Continental Readers
- The 1622 Quarto and the First Folio Texts of Othello
- An Approach to the Problem of Pericles
- The Shakespeare Collection in the Library of Trinity College, Cambridge
- New Place: The Only Representation of Shakespeare’s House From an Unpublished Manuscript
- Letters to an Actor Playing Hamlet
- Shakespeare’s Imagery: The Diabolic Images in Othello
- Suggestions for a New Approach to Shakespeare’s Imagery
- Shakespeare’s Influence on Pushkin’s Dramatic Work
- Shakespeare on the Flemish Stage of Belgium, 1876–1951
- International Notes
- Shakespeare Productions in the United Kingdom: 1950
- Shakespeare in the Waterloo Road
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeares’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
- Plates
Suggestions for a New Approach to Shakespeare’s Imagery
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- Restoring Shakespeare: The Modern Editor’s Task
- Suggestions Towards an Edition of Shakespeare for French, German and Other Continental Readers
- The 1622 Quarto and the First Folio Texts of Othello
- An Approach to the Problem of Pericles
- The Shakespeare Collection in the Library of Trinity College, Cambridge
- New Place: The Only Representation of Shakespeare’s House From an Unpublished Manuscript
- Letters to an Actor Playing Hamlet
- Shakespeare’s Imagery: The Diabolic Images in Othello
- Suggestions for a New Approach to Shakespeare’s Imagery
- Shakespeare’s Influence on Pushkin’s Dramatic Work
- Shakespeare on the Flemish Stage of Belgium, 1876–1951
- International Notes
- Shakespeare Productions in the United Kingdom: 1950
- Shakespeare in the Waterloo Road
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeares’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
- Plates
Summary
When in 1933 L. C. Knights pleaded that “the only profitable approach to Shakespeare is a consideration of his plays as dramatic poems”, he was putting forward an extreme point of view, reacting against what he considered the established way of regarding Shakespeare’s plays, as studies in character. For at that time the study of Shakespeare’s imagery, concentration on the poetry rather than on the action of the plays, was a comparatively new trend in Shakespearian criticism, although notable books had been published in the late 1920’s and early 1930’s by G. Wilson Knight, Elizabeth Holmes, H. W. Wells and others. More recently, and especially since the publication of C. F. E. Spurgeon’s Shakespeare’s Imagery in 1935, the volume of writings on the imagery of the plays has increased enormously. Discussion of verse and imagery appears in many books dealing mainly with other aspects of Shakespeare’s plays, and a fair proportion of current Shakespearian criticism is concerned with imagery and language alone. By 1948 A. H. Sackton could observe that
it is now becoming a commonplace of criticism that an Elizabethan play may be approached most profitably not as a study in human character, or as an expression of an individual philosophy, but as a dramatic poem.
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- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 81 - 92Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1952
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