On King Lear
About this book
In their lectures on King Lear, the eight contributors to this volume fulfill Shakespeare's rigorous injunction to Speak what we feel" about the playwright's amplest tragedy. Representing distinctive but complementary points of view, they cover theatrical history, verbal style, acting and actors, the playwright in his cultural context and in the light of enduring human concerns, and the Shakespearean view of history, tragedy, and psychology.
Originally published in 1982.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Introduction
- One King Lear and the Shakespearean Pageant of History
- Two King Lear: Acting and Feeling
- Three Shakespeare, the King's Company, and King Lear
- Four As the Wind Sits: The Poetics of King Lear
- Five The Image of the Family in King Lear
- Six King Lear and the Two Abysses
- Seven "Nothing Almost Sees Miracles": Tragic Knowledge in King Lear
- Eight King Lear in the Theater
