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Shakespeare's Individualism Peter Holbrook (University of Queensland)

Shakespeare's Individualism By Peter Holbrook (University of Queensland)

Shakespeare's Individualism by Peter Holbrook (University of Queensland)


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Summary

Shakespeare, claims Peter Holbrook, is an author who cares above all for the value of individual freedom, the ideal of 'being oneself'. Through detailed discussion of many of Shakespeare's plays and poems, this book demonstrates how central the theme of individual freedom is to Shakespeare.

Shakespeare's Individualism Summary

Shakespeare's Individualism by Peter Holbrook (University of Queensland)

Providing a provocative and original perspective on Shakespeare, Peter Holbrook argues that Shakespeare is an author friendly to such essentially modern and unruly notions as individuality, freedom, self-realization and authenticity. These expressive values vivify Shakespeare's own writing; they also form a continuous, and a central, part of the Shakespearean tradition. Engaging with the theme of the individual will in specific plays and poems, and examining a range of libertarian-minded scholarly and literary responses to Shakespeare over time, Shakespeare's Individualism advances the proposition that one of the key reasons for reading Shakespeare today is his commitment to individual liberty - even as we recognize that freedom is not just an indispensable ideal but also, potentially, a dangerous one. Engagingly written and jargon free, this book demonstrates that Shakespeare has important things to say about fundamental issues of human existence.

Shakespeare's Individualism Reviews

'This is a free-spirited book - and in this sense, it practises the individualism that it preaches - in its inventive interweaving of its discussion of Shakespeare with numerous exponents and inflectors of liberal/individualist thought, including Montaigne, Blake, Coleridge, William Hazlitt, Frederick James Furnivall, John Stuart Mill, A. C. Bradley, Andre Gide, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Kierkegaard and Nietzsche. One of the undoubted strengths of this approach is the way it enables Holbrook to embark on a number of different excursions into his topic, with each one frequently adding a fresh angle, implication, or alignment.' Cahiers Elisabethains
'The book's bravery in questioning the gains and contradictions of contemporary literary theory is bracing.' The Times Literary Supplement

About Peter Holbrook (University of Queensland)

Peter Holbrook teaches English Literature at the University of Queensland.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Part I. Shakespeare, Hamlet, Selfhood: 1. Hamlet and failure; 2. 'A room...at the back of the shop'; 3. Egyptianism (our fascist future); 4. 'Become who you are!'; 5. Hamlet and self-love; 6. 'To thine own self be true'; 7. Listening to ghosts; 8. Shakespeare's self; Part II. Shakespeare and Evil: 9. 'Old lad, I am thine own': authenticity and Titus Andronicus; 10. Evil and self-creation; 11. Libertarian Shakespeare: Mill, Bradley; 12. Shakespearean immoral individualism: Gide; 13. Strange Shakespeare: Symons and others; 14. Eliot's rejection of Shakespeare; 15. Shakespearean immoralism: Antony and Cleopatra; 16. Making oneself known: Montaigne and the Sonnets; Part III. Shakespeare and Self-Government: 17. Freedom and self-government: The Tempest; 18. Calibanism; Conclusion: Shakespeare's 'beauteous freedom'.

Additional information

NLS9781107630673
9781107630673
1107630673
Shakespeare's Individualism by Peter Holbrook (University of Queensland)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2013-09-19
260
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - Shakespeare's Individualism