Fr. 44.50

Fathoming the Deep in English Renaissance Tragedy - Horror, Mystery, and the Oceanic Sublime

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext Laurence Publicover's lucid, elegantly-written book offers fresh and intelligent insight into Shakespeare's major tragedies and some of the most important tragedies of his contemporaries, including Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, Kyd's Spanish Tragedy and Webster's Duchess of Malfi. Through its focus on imagery of marine depth, the book shows how tragedy sends metaphorical plumb-lines into aspects of experience not normally available to the human senses. If there are more things in heaven and earth than standard philosophy dreams of, Publicover shows there are other, still-more troubling things below the oceans, and tragic experience may be the only way of accessing them, for good or ill. Fathoming the Deep will be stimulating and useful for students of these plays at all levels, and will prompt much interesting thinking among scholars. Informationen zum Autor Laurence Publicover is Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Bristol, where he works on English Renaissance literature and on human-ocean relations in the early modern period and beyond. He is the author of Dramatic Geography: Romance, Cultural Encounter, and Intertheatricality in Early Modern Mediterranean Drama (Oxford University Press, 2017) and co-editor, with Susann Liebich, of Shipboard Literary Cultures: Reading, Writing, and Performing at Sea (Palgrave, 2021). Alongside Jimmy Packham, he is writing a human and literary history of the seabed to be published by University of Chicago Press. Klappentext This scholarly but accessible book offers fresh readings of canonical plays including Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, and The Duchess of Malfi, while also intervening in recent critical debates concerning the work and the history of tragedy and reflecting on what it means to read these plays in a time of environmental crisis. Zusammenfassung This book demonstrates how a group of tragedies by Shakespeare and his contemporaries stage the fear and exhilaration generated by encounters with the unknown and the extraordinary. Arguing that the maritime art of fathoming--that is, dropping a lead and line into water to measure its depth--operates as a master-image for these plays, it illustrates how they create sublime horror through intuitions of mysterious more-than-human agencies and of worlds beyond the visible. Though tightly focused on a specific body of imagery, the book strikes up dialogue with a number of critical fields, including theories and histories of tragedy; ecocriticism and the environmental humanities; oceanic studies; and work on early modern ideas about the body, madness, and language. Countering a tendency within tragic theory to value the textual over the dramatic, it also demonstrates how the tragic effects to which it points are created through specific theatrical strategies, including the use of offstage space, intertheatricality, and the violation of dramatic conventions. Situating its arguments within recent criticism on these plays and on tragedy more generally, and pushing back against scholarship that regards the genre in Shakespeare's time as concerned more with pity than with fear, the book offers fresh and detailed readings of some of the most frequently studied plays in the English canon, including Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, The Duchess of Malfi, and The Changeling. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Horatio's Warnings 1: The Spanish Tragedy and the English Tradition 2: Fathoming King Lear 3: The Horror of Macbeth 4: Peering into the Beyond: The Duchess of Malfi 5: Middleton's Deep Conclusion: Tragedy, History, and Ecological Thought ...

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