The Winter's Tale

The Winter's Tale - Greenwich Exchange Student Guide To

Paperback (06 Apr 2005)

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Publisher's Synopsis

John Lucas' account of the play considers the significance of Shakespeare's decision to break with the expectations of the Jacobean stage, of his treatment of sexual jealousy, of the contrasting (and complementary) worlds of court and country, and of the ways in which women successfully oppose male power. He also relates the play to a number of others in the canon in order to identify what is uniquely wonderful about The Winter's Tale. The Winter's Tale is a play in which Shakespeare chooses to flout the laws of dra;matic probability. Not only are its two halves separated by a gap of 16 years, a man is eaten by a bear, a baby is miraculously saved from death by drowning, a statue no less miraculously comes to life. It is also a play which seems destined for a tragic outcome and yet which ends in reconciliation, in love restored, in a king's mad jealousy healed. Perhaps most importantly, in The Winter's Tale women become the active agents of good rather than the passive sufferers to which conventional role they seem condemned at the play's outset.

Book information

ISBN: 9781871551808
Publisher: Greenwich Exchange
Imprint: Greenwich Exchange
Pub date:
DEWEY: 822.33
DEWEY edition: 22
Number of pages: 81
Weight: 156g
Height: 208mm
Width: 139mm
Spine width: 7mm