Fr. 40.50

In Search of Shakespearean Tragedy - Tragedic Language, Tragedic Form

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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A funny thing happened to Shakespeare on his journey from lyric poet to comedian to preeminent tragedian. He ended up writing the most famous of all tragedies since the Greeks and yet had his reputation destroyed for over a century because he had done such a poor job of it! With the Romantics, Shakespeare's reputation revived, but no one bothered to reform the criticism of tragedy to place Shakespeare at the center of tragedic achievement rather than essentially antithetic to the received tradition. As a result today, educated audiences go to Shakespeare's tragedies expecting to find a single tragic hero with a single tragic flaw, agonizing over an impossible situation. Those same educated audiences do not expect to see thirteen dancers on stage at all times as the tragedic chorus of the theatre that inspired Aristotle's definitions. The present study seeks to start criticism back on a sane track of understanding the Shakespearean tragedic achievement. Central to that effort, it seeks to reawaken us to the true Shakespearean tragedic language, which is solidly contrastive to the elevated language of tragedy which Aristotle enshrined. The search for Shakespearean tragedy has begun.

About the author

Prof. Paul and Robin Grawe are humor researchers at the Institute for Travesty, Comedy, and Humor studies. Their books on comedy include Comedy in Space Time, and the Imagination, December Comedy, and A Cheshire Smile, a study of Shakespearean comedy and humor. The present study creates analogies for understanding Shakespearean tragedy.

Product details

Authors Pau Grawe, Paul Grawe, Robin Jaeckle Grawe
Publisher LAP Lambert Academic Publishing
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 06.10.2016
 
EAN 9783659951855
ISBN 978-3-659-95185-5
No. of pages 128
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > Renaissance, Enlightenment
Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Philosophy: antiquity to present day

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