Shakespeare’s Settings and a Sense of Place
Author(s) Ralph Berry
Language: English
Genre(s): Literary Criticism
- March 2016 · 101 pages ·216x138mm
- · Paperback - 9781783168088
- · eBook - pdf - 9781783168095
- · eBook - epub - 9781783168101
About The Book
Shakespeare’s use of location governs his dramas. Some he was personally familiar with, like Windsor; some he knew through his imagination, like Kronborg Castle (‘Elsinore’); some matter because Shakespeare’s plays were performed there, like Hampton Court and the Great Hall of the Middle Temple. Shakespeare’s plays are powerfully shaped by their sense of place, and the location becomes an unacknowledged actor. This book is about the locations that he used for his plays, each of which the author has visited, and the result presents the reader with a sense of those places that Shakespeare knew either through direct personal contact or through his imaginative re-interpretation of the scene.
Contents
INTRODUCTION
1)Hamlet at Kronborg
2)Elsinore Revisited
3)Shakespeare at the Middle Temple
4)Haddon Hall and the Catholic Network
5)Ephesus and The Comedy of Errors
6)Shakespeare’s Venice
7)Measure for Measure at Hampton Court
8)Windsor and The Merry Wives
9)Richard III’s England
10) Falstaff’s Tavern
11) Jonson’s London
12) Stage Direction as Memoir: Jonson at Althorp