Image for Reading what's there  : essays on Shakespeare in honor of Stephen Booth

Reading what's there : essays on Shakespeare in honor of Stephen Booth

Berger, Thomas L.(Contributions by)Cohen, Ralph Alan(Contributions by)Ellinghausen, Laurie(Contributions by)Ellis-Tolaydo, Michael(Contributions by)Gamboa, Brett(Contributions by)Goldman, Michael(Contributions by)Halio, Jay L.(Contributions by)Hirsh, James E.(Contributions by)Maurer, Margaret(Contributions by)Collins, Michael J.(Edited by)
See all formats and editions

Stephen Booth has, for over forty years, proposed a distinct understanding of how Shakespeare’s plays and poems work upon us and a unique and rigorous way of reading them.

The essays here reflect his insights and method and are meant both to recognize his monumental achievements as a critic and to suggest the enduring value of his work to Shakespeare scholarship.

The first chapter explains both the method and the strengths of Booth’s approach to Shakespeare.

The next two—on Romeo and Juliet and The Rape of Lucrece—demonstrate Booth’s way of reading Shakespeare.

The following four chapters develop Booth’s contention that Shakespeare often sets “audiences to watch—or, rather, to try to watch—a play other than the one he shows them.” The next two chapters look at textual problems from Booth’s perspective and explore the challenges editors face in their attempts to establish authentic texts for modern readers.

The last three chapters focus on teaching and include a description of Stephen Booth’s teaching practices and his own renown explanation, through a commentary on Philip D.

Eastman’s Go, Dog. Go!, of the way poetry works upon its readers and the reasons they value it highly.

The book concludes with a bibliography of Stephen Booth’s work.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£77.00
Product Details
University of Delaware Press
1611495075 / 9781611495072
Hardback
822.33
05/12/2014
United States
English
174 pages
23 cm