Shakespeare and Renaissance PoliticsAndrew Hadfield A&C Black, 2014. márc. 20. - 328 oldal Shakespeare, like many of his contemporaries, was concerned with the question of the succession and the legitimacy of the monarch. From the early plays through the histories to Hamlet, Shakespeare's work is haunted by the problem of political legitimacy. |
Tartalomjegyzék
1 | |
True and False Sovereigns in the English History Plays | 36 |
The Power and Rights of the Crown | 78 |
Republicanism and Constitutionalism | 111 |
Alternative Forms of Government | 150 |
The Reality of Jacobean Politics | 182 |
AFTERWORD | 227 |
APPENDIX 1 The Plantagenet Dynasty | 229 |
APPENDIX 2 The Tudor Dynasty | 233 |
NOTES | 235 |
286 | |
308 | |
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actions Alcibiades Andrew Hadfield argued argument Athens audience Basilikon Doron Basingstoke Ben Jonson body politic Brabantio Brutus Cambridge citizens claim Colonial Writing commonwealth constitution contemporary Coriolanus court David Discourse Drama Duke Earl Early Modern England Edward election Elizabethan emperor English history Essex form of government Hamlet Harmondsworth Henry Henry VI Henry’s history plays Holinshed’s Chronicles J.G.A. Pocock Jacobean James James’s John Jonson Julius Caesar King Lear King’s liberty Literature London Lucrece’s Macbeth Machiavelli Marcus Mary Measure for Measure monarch Othello Oxford parliament passim plot Plutarch Political Thought Prince problem Prospero Queen question Rape of Lucrece rebellion Reign of Elizabeth Renaissance represented republic republican Richard Richard II Roman Rome rule ruler Saturninus scene Scotland Shakespeare Shakespeare’s history Shakespeare’s play significance Stuart subjects succession suggests Tacitus Tarquin Tempest Thomas throne Timon Titus Andronicus Tragedy trans Trew Law Tudor tyranny tyrant Venetian Venice Vindiciae virtue