Image for A Midsummer Night's Dream

A Midsummer Night's Dream

Part of the Writers and their work series
See all formats and editions

Change and transformation are central to the action, themes and language of A Midsummer Night's Dream.

This book will show how the play participates in awidespread 1590s concern with mutability; often, as here, expressed through moon-imagery, and associated with representation of the ageing Virgin queen.

However, it is also very much a play about procreative change, set at one of the 'green hinges' of the year, to use Angela Carter's phrase.

The happy ending is marked by multiple marriages; and yet, these marriages have been achieved through conflict and force.

Comedy veers close to tragedy, and vice versa in the inset Pyramus and Thisbe performance, illustrating Shakespeare's sense of the innate indeterminacy of genres.

It is also Shakespeare's most Spenserian play in its depiction of a supernaturally animated natural world, providing the grounds for the characterisation of Shakespeare as a poet of nature which was to prove so influential for Milton and the Romantics.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£16.82 Save 10.00%
RRP £18.69
Product Details
Liverpool University Press
0746307543 / 9780746307540
Paperback / softback
822.33
11/01/1996
United Kingdom
English
96p.
22 cm
further/higher education /general /postgraduate /undergraduate Learn More