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The Child in Shakespeare Charlotte Scott (Senior Lecturer in Shakespeare, Goldsmiths College, University of London)

The Child in Shakespeare By Charlotte Scott (Senior Lecturer in Shakespeare, Goldsmiths College, University of London)

Summary

Focusing on Shakespeare's unique interest in the young body, the life stage, and the parental and social dynamic, this book offers the first sustained account of the role and representation of the child in Shakespeare's dramatic imagination.

The Child in Shakespeare Summary

The Child in Shakespeare by Charlotte Scott (Senior Lecturer in Shakespeare, Goldsmiths College, University of London)

This book examines the child on Shakespeare's stage. As a life force, an impassioned plea for justice, a legacy, history, memory or image of love or violence, children are everywhere in Shakespeare's plays. Focusing on Shakespeare's unique interest in the young body, the life stage, and the parental and social dynamic, this book offers the first sustained account of the role and representation of the child in Shakespeare's dramatic imagination. Drawing on a vast range of contemporary texts, including parenting manuals and household and pedagogic texts, as well as books on nursing and maternity, child birth, and child rearing, The Child in Shakespeare explores the contexts in which the idea of the child is mobilised as a body and image on the early modern stage. Understanding the child, not only as a specific life stage, but also as a role and an abstraction of feeling, this book examines why Shakespeare, who showed little interest in writing for children in the playing companies, wrote so powerfully about them on his stage.

The Child in Shakespeare Reviews

Scott's style is reader friendly, even poetic. Recommended. * J.S. Carducci, CHOICE *
Charlotte Scott's The Child in Shakespeare brings into focus particularly vulnerable figures within that space. Organized by genre, and surveying Shakespeare's career-long interest in all phases of childhood, from infancy to adolescence, Scott's book opens with a vivid account of royal children in the early history plays, who, she argues, are forced to enter an adult world of political intrigue for which they are hopelessly ill-equipped. * Laura Kolb, Times Literary Supplement *
The Child in Shakespeare calls scholar-teachers working with Shakespeare to think deeply about how representations of unique and particular children and childhoods make meaning in Shakespeare's plays and beyond - a call that is of utmost importance in this particular political moment. * Alicia Andrzejewski, College of William & Mary, Renaissance Quarterly *

About Charlotte Scott (Senior Lecturer in Shakespeare, Goldsmiths College, University of London)

Charlotte Scott has written widely on Shakespeare, including two books entitled Shakespeare and the Idea of the Book (OUP, 2007) and Shakespeare's Nature: from Culture to Cultivation (OUP, 2014) as well as articles and essays. She reviews for Shakespeare Survey and is a frequent contributor to literary festivals and public events. She has taught Shakespeare at Goldsmiths for 12 years.

Table of Contents

1: 'And all my children?' 2: Never such Innocence: Mourning Children in the History Plays 3: The end of the beginning: Shakespeare's Tragic Children 4: 'Love is proved in the letting go': Marriage, Space, and Gender in A Midsummer Night's Dream and Much Ado about Nothing 5: 'Time is chasing us'. Regret, Time, and the Child Eternal in the Late Plays 6: 'Prevent it, resist it, let it not be so, / Lest child, child's children, cry against you woe!'

Additional information

NPB9780198828556
9780198828556
0198828551
The Child in Shakespeare by Charlotte Scott (Senior Lecturer in Shakespeare, Goldsmiths College, University of London)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2018-10-04
192
N/A
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