Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book
Author Vickers, Brian.

Title Appropriating Shakespeare : contemporary critical quarrels / by Brian Vickers
Published New Haven : Yale University Press, 1993

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  820.33 Z V637  AVAILABLE
Description xvii, 508 pages ; 24 cm
Contents Critical theories. The diminution of language : Saussure to Derrida Creator and interpreters -- Critical practices. Deconstruction : undermining, overreaching New historicism : disaffected subjects Psychocriticism : finding the fault Feminist stereotypes : misogyny, patriarchy, bombast Christians and Marxists : allegory, ideology
Summary The last twenty years have seen an increasing fragmentation in Shakespeare studies, with the emergence of several critical schools, each with its own ideology, each convinced that all other approaches are deficient. In this important book, Brian Vickers argues that, in attempting to appropriate Shakespeare for their own purposes, each of these schools distorts the text by omission and misrepresentation. Two substantial opening chapters trace the derivation of current literary theory from the iconoclastic mood of l960s Paris. They show how an influential group of thinkers in the structuralist and post-structuralist tradition (Levi-Strauss, Barthes, Lacan, Althusser, Derrida, Foucault) promulgated a wholly negative concept of language, arguing that language cannot reliably represent reality; that literature cannot represent life; and that since no definitive reading is possible, all interpretation is misrepresentation. Vickers demonstrates that these attitudes have been decisively refuted, restates the central properties of language, and rehabilitates the notion of the author as creator of a literary work. At the core of the book he surveys the main conflicting schools in Shakespearian literary criticism - deconstructionism, feminism, new historicism, cultural materialism, and psychoanalytic, Marxist and Christian interpretations - describing the theoretical basis of each school, both in its own words and in those of its critics. Evaluating the resulting interpretations of Shakespeare, he shows that each is biased and fragmentary in its own way. Solidly researched, sharply argued and inevitably controversial, this book challenges many recent orthodoxies. As well as to theatre goers and readers of Shakespeare and Elizabethan drama, it will be of great interest to anyone concerned with modern literary theory
Analysis English drama
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [491]-500) and index
Subject Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 -- Criticism and interpretation -- History -- 20th century.
Literary quarrels -- History -- 20th century.
Criticism -- History -- 20th century.
Literature, Modern -- History and criticism -- Theory, etc.
LC no. 92038549
ISBN 0300054157
0300061056 (paperback)