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Shakespeare in a Divided America

What His Plays Tell Us About Our Past and Future

18,20 €

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Shakespeare in a Divided America. What His Plays Tell Us About Our Past and Future

18,20 €

Shakespeare in a Divided America

What His Plays Tell Us About Our Past and Future

  • Editorial: Penguin USA
  • Fecha de la edición:
  • Número de la edición: 1
  • ISBN: 978-0-525-52231-7
  • EAN: 9780525522317
  • Encuadernación: Tapa blanda
  • Dimensiones: 140 cm x 213 cm
  • 320 páginas
  • Idiomas: inglés
From leading Shakespeare scholar James Shapiro, a timely and insightful examination of what the world's greatest dramatist can teach us about life in an America riven by conflict

The plays of William Shakespeare are rare common ground in the United States. They are read at school by almost every student, staged in theaters across the land, and long valued by conservatives and liberals alike. For well over two centuries, Americans of all stripes have turned to Shakespeare's works to explore the nation's fault lines, including such issues as manifest destiny, race, gender, immigration, and free speech. In a narrative arching across the centuries, 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. Reflecting on how Shakespeare has been invoked and at times weaponized at pivotal moments in our past, Shapiro takes us from President John Quincy Adams's disgust with Desdemona's interracial marriage to Othello, to Abraham Lincoln's and his assassin John Wilkes Booth's competing obsessions with the plays, up through the fraught debates over marriage and same-sex love at the heart of the celebrated adaptations Kiss Me, Kate and Shakespeare in Love. Deeply researched, and timely, Shakespeare in a Divided America reveals how no writer has been more closely embraced by Americans, or has shed more light on the hot-button issues in our history. Indeed, it is by better understanding Shakespeare's role in American life, Shapiro argues, that we might begin to mend our bitterly divided land.

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