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Creator
Date
2011, ©2011
Location
New York, NY
New York, New York (State)
United States
New York, New York (State)
United States
Media format
Printed text
Extent
x, 293 pages
Language
English
Size
22 cm
Reference IDs
Folger bibliographic ID: 245960
Folger call number: PR2821 .H35 2011
Folger holdings ID: 312768
Folger call number: PR2821 .H35 2011
Folger holdings ID: 312768
Summary
"The Halletts' investigation differs from anything that has been written about the relationship between Thomas More and William Shakespeare in that it approaches the subject from a dramaturgical point of view. What was Shakespeare the artist looking for that made him seize upon More's History per se and base Richard III entirely on the brief four-month period covered in More's book, compressing time rather than telescoping it? What did Shakespeare find in More that resulted in his amazing new ability to create dramatic scenes of the sort that one finds in Richard's wooing of the Citizens at Baynard's Castle, which More himself did not dramatize but harshly denigrated? What was the imaginative process that enabled Shakespeare to create the scenes in which Richard woos first Lady Anne and later Queen Elizabeth (neither of which are in More) on the model of what he learned from writing the Baynard's Castle scene? How was Shakespeare able to separate out More's negative and disparaging view of Richard's thespian abilities (which, More assures his readers, everyone instantly saw through) from the buoyant and positive view that Shakespeare's Richard offers of his own powers as dramatist, presenter, actor, and would-be king? All of these questions need to be answered. No book has yet attempted to define in specific terms either what Shakespeare learned from his study of More's History or how he learned it. This book, we hope, is unique. Shakespeare's newly discovered dramatic techniques are explicated in the various chapters with clarity and strength in a way that can benefit future generations of artists"--
Notes
Edition
First edition
General notes
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Also known as
Extended title: The artistic links between William Shakespeare and Sir Thomas More : radically different Richards / Charles A. Hallett and Elaine S. Hallett
Subjects
Related names
author: Hallett, Charles A.
subject: Richard III, King of England, 1452-1485
subject: Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616
associated with: Hallett, Elaine S., 1935-
subject: Richard III, King of England, 1452-1485
subject: Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616
associated with: Hallett, Elaine S., 1935-