One of the New York Times Ten Best Books of the Year • A National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist • A New York Times Notable Book A timely exploration of what Shakespeare’s plays reveal about our divided land. “In this sprightly and enthralling book . . . Shapiro amply demonstrates [that] for Americans the politics of Shakespeare are not confined to the public realm, but have enormous relevance in the sphere of private life.” —The Guardian (London) The plays of William Shakespeare are rare common ground in the United States. For well over two centuries, Americans of all stripes—presidents and activists, soldiers and writers, conservatives and liberals alike—have turned to Shakespeare’s works to explore the nation’s fault lines. In a narrative arching from Revolutionary times to the present day, leading scholar James Shapiro traces the unparalleled role of Shakespeare’s four-hundred-year-old tragedies and comedies in illuminating the many concerns on which American identity has turned. From Abraham Lincoln’s and his assassin, John Wilkes Booth’s, competing Shakespeare obsessions to the 2017 controversy over the staging of Julius Caesar in Central Park, in which a Trump-like leader is assassinated, Shakespeare in a Divided America reveals how no writer has been more embraced, more weaponized, or has shed more light on the hot-button issues in our history.
... she eventually turned against him as well. See Robert Cantwell, “Hawthorne and Delia Bacon,”American Quarterly 1 (1949), pp. 343–60, and James Wallace, “Hawthorne and the Scribbling Women Reconsidered,”American Literature 62 (1990), ...
But the poet of them all Who will start 'em simply ravin' Is the poet people call The bard of StratfordonAvon. REFRAIN 1 Brush up your Shakespeare, Start quoting him now. Brush up your Shakespeare And the women you will wow.
Reproduced by kind permission of the Huntington Library. o: 3. o 3. ; §§ 6. “A Woman Jew of Andrinople” in Nicolas de Nicolay, The Navigations Into Turkie, trans. T. Washington (London, 1585), p.147. Reproduced by kind permission of the ...
In this gripping account, James Shapiro sets out to answer this question, "succeed[ing] where others have fallen short." (Boston Globe) 1599 was an epochal year for Shakespeare and England.
The Troubling Story of the World's Most Famous Passion Play James Shapiro. in 1890: “Sitting among those simple surroundings, it seemed almost impossible to realize that one was living in the nineteenth century.
Shakespeare turned 42 in 1606. He had written more plays and had been writing plays for longer than any other dramatist in England. Twenty-nine comedies, histories, and tragedies and all...
In every case, Greenblatt brings a flash of illumination to the work, enabling us to experience these great plays again as if for the first time, and with greater understanding and appreciation of their extraordinary depth and humanity ...
In This Is Shakespeare, Emma Smith—an intellectually, theatrically, and ethically exciting writer—takes us into a world of politicking and copycatting, as we watch Shakespeare emulating the blockbusters of Christopher Marlowe and Thomas ...
"Brilliant, beautifully organized, exceedingly readable." —Philip Roth World-renowned Shakespeare scholar Stephen Greenblatt explores the playwright’s insight into bad (and often mad) rulers.
In Last Best Hope, George Packer traces the shocks back to their sources.