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Retheorizing Shakespeare through Presentist Readings

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Retheorizing Shakespeare through Presentist Readings Synopsis

This book offers a theoretical rationale for the emerging presentist movement in Shakespeare studies and goes on to show, in a series of close readings, that a presentist Shakespeare is not an anachronism. Relying on a Brechtian aesthetic of "naïve surrealism" as the performative model of the early modern, urban, public theater, James O’Rourke demonstrates how this Brechtian model is able to capture the full range of interplays that could take place between Shakespeare’s words, the nonillusionist performance devices of the early modern stage, and the live audiences that shared the physical space of the theatre with Shakespeare’s actors. O’Rourke argues that the limitations placed upon the critical energies of early modern drama by the influential new historicist paradigm of contained subversion is based on a poetics of the sublime, which misrepresents the performative aesthetic of the theater as a self-sufficient spectacle that compels reception in its own terms. Reimagining Shakespeare as our contemporary, O’Rourke shows how the immanent critical logic of Shakespeare’s works can enter into dialogue with our most sophisticated critiques of our cultural fictions.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780415897037
Publication date:
Author: James Florida State University, US ORourke
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis Ltd
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 202 pages
Series: Routledge Studies in Shakespeare
Genres: Literary studies: plays and playwrights
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800