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Lectures on Shakespeare

Part of the W.H. Auden: critical editions series
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"W. H. Auden, poet and critic, will conduct a course on Shakespeare at the New School for Social Research beginning Wednesday.

Mr. Auden has announced that in his course ... he proposes to read all Shakespeare's plays in chronological order." "The New York Times" reported this item on September 27, 1946, giving notice of a rare opportunity to hear one of the century's great poets comment on one of the greatest poets of all time.

Published here for the first time, these lectures now make Auden's thoughts on Shakespeare available widely.

Painstakingly reconstructed by Arthur Kirsch from the notes of students who attended, primarily Alan Ansen, who became Auden's secretary and friend, the lectures afford remarkable insights into Shakespeare's plays as well as the sonnets.

A remarkable lecturer, Auden could inspire his listeners to great feats of recall and dictation.

Consequently, the poet's unique voice, often down to the precise details of his phrasing, speaks clearly and eloquently throughout this volume.

In these lectures, we hear Auden alluding to authors from Homer, Dante, and St.

Augustine to Kierkegaard, Ibsen, and T. S.Eliot, drawing upon the full range of European literature and opera, and referring to the day's newspapers and magazines, movies and cartoons.

The result is an extended instance of the "live conversation" that Auden believed criticism to be.

Notably a conversation between Auden's capacious thought and the work of Shakespeare, these lectures are also a prelude to many ideas developed in Auden's later prose - a prose in which, one critic has remarked, "all the artists of the past are alive and talking among themselves." Reflecting the twentieth-century poet's lifelong engagement with the crowning masterpieces of English literature, these lectures add immeasurably to both our understanding of Auden and our appreciation of Shakespeare.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691102821 / 9780691102825
Paperback / softback
822.33
29/09/2002
United States
English
xxiv, 398 p.
24 cm
general /research & professional /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: London: Faber, 2000; Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2001.
What Auden has to say about Shakepeare's plays is almost always interesting, for two reasons. First, he knows how to praise or dissent, and to do so with much originality; secondly, he speaks of the ideas that were shaping his own thought and work at this important moment in his career, so that this book is as much a contribution to our understanding of Auden as it is to our appreciation of Shakespeare. It is beautifully edited and should interest all readers of Shakespeare and all admirers of Auden. -- Frank Kermode Auden's lectures on Shakespeare are a marvelous blend of steady, patient inte
What Auden has to say about Shakepeare's plays is almost always interesting, for two reasons. First, he knows how to praise or dissent, and to do so with much originality; secondly, he speaks of the ideas that were shaping his own thought and work at this important moment in his career, so that this book is as much a contribution to our understanding of Auden as it is to our appreciation of Shakespeare. It is beautifully edited and should interest all readers of Shakespeare and all admirers of Auden. -- Frank Kermode Auden's lectures on Shakespeare are a marvelous blend of steady, patient inte 2AB English, DSGS Shakespeare studies & criticism