Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Enterline, Lynn, 1956-

Title Shakespeare's Schoolroom : Rhetoric, Discipline, Emotion / Lynn Enterline
Edition 1st ed
Published Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, ©2012

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Contents Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Introduction: "Thou Art Translated" -- Chapter 1: Rhetoric and the Passions in Shakespeare's Schoolroom -- Chapter 2: Imitate and Punish: The Theatricality of Everyday Life in Elizabethan Schoolrooms -- Chapter 3: The Art of Loving Mastery: Venus, Adonis, and the Erotics of Early Modern Pedagogy -- Chapter 4: The Cruelties of Character in the Taming of the Shrew -- Chapter 5: "What's Hecuba to him?": Transferring Woe in Hamlet, The Rape of Lucrece, and the Winter's Tale -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- Acknowledgments
Summary ""Lynn Enterline locates in the schoolroom a complex of formative issues that on the one hand describe broad-based cultural processes in Elizabethan society, and on the other turn up in and illuminate the works of Shakespeare. What is striking and noteworthy is the persuasiveness with which she demonstrates their emergence in a vast body of sixteenth-century pedagogical literature and their aptness to our own contemporary theories of personality and gender formation."--Leonard Barkan, Princeton University Shakespeare's Schoolroom places moments of considerable emotional power in Shakespeare's poetry--portraits of what his contemporaries called "the passions"--alongside the discursive and material practices of sixteenth-century English pedagogy. Humanist training in Latin grammar and rhetorical facility was designed to intervene in social reproduction, to sort out which differences between bodies (male and female) and groups (aristocrats, the middling sort, and those below) were necessary to producing proper English "gentlemen." But the method adopted by Lynn Enterline in this book uncovers a rather different story from the one schoolmasters invented to promote the social efficacy of their pedagogical innovations. Beginning with the observation that Shakespeare frequently reengaged school techniques through the voices of those it excluded (particularly women), Enterline shows that when his portraits of "love" and "woe" betray their institutional origins, they reveal both the cost of a Latin education as well as the contradictory conditions of genteel masculinity in sixteenth-century Britain. In contrast to attempts to explain early modern emotion in relation to medical discourse, Enterline uncovers the crucial role that rhetoric and the texts of the classical past play in Shakespeare's passions. She relies throughout on the axiom that rhetoric has two branches that continuously interact: tropological (requiring formal literary analysis) and transactional (requiring social and historical analysis). Each chapter moves between grammar school archives and literary canon, using linguistic, rhetorical, and literary detail to illustrate the significant difference between what humanists claimed their methods would achieve and what the texts of at least one former schoolboy reveal about the institution's unintended literary and social consequences. When Shakespeare creates the convincing effects of character and emotion for which he is so often singled out as a precursor of "modern" subjectivity, he signals his debt to the Latin institution that granted him the cultural capital of an early modern gentleman precisely when undercutting the socially normative categories schoolmasters invoked as their educational goal. Lynn Enterline is Chancellor's Professor of English at Vanderbilt University. She is author of The Rhetoric of the Body from Ovid to Shakespeare and The Tears of Narcissus: Melancholia and Masculinity in Early Modern Writing."--Project Muse
Analysis Cultural Studies
Literature
Medieval and Renaissance Studies
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes In English
Print version record
Subject Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 -- Knowledge and learning.
SUBJECT Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 -- Knowledge and learning
Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 fast
Shakespeare, William 1564-1616 gnd
Subject English drama -- Early modern and Elizabethan, 1500-1600 -- Classical influences
Education, Secondary -- Curricula -- England -- History -- 16th century
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Shakespeare.
Education, Secondary -- Curricula
English drama -- Classical influences
Learning and scholarship
Bildung Motiv
Bildung
Rhetorik
Schule Motiv
Gymnasieskolan.
Engelsk dramatik.
England
England
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780812207132
0812207130