Item type | Current library | Collection | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Standard loan | Library Services Main collection | Print books | 809.93351 WEL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 14124203 | |
Standard loan | Library Services Main collection | Print books | 809.93351 WEL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 16035603 |
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809.9332561 DIM New Turkes : dramatizing Islam and the Ottomans in early modern England | 809.93351 LOO Arthurian literature in the Middle Ages : a collaborative history | 809.93351 MOR The character of King Arthur in medieval literature | 809.93351 WEL Hamlet in his modern guises | 809.93351 WEL Hamlet in his modern guises | 809.93355 FAS Fashion in fiction : text and clothing in literature, film, and television | 809.933561 PIN Creativity, madness and civilisation |
Includes index.
Focusing on Shakespeare's Hamlet as foremost a study of grief, Alexander Welsh offers a powerful analysis of its protagonist as the archetype of the modern hero. For over two centuries writers and critics have viewed Hamlet's persona as a fascinating blend of self-consciousness, guilt, and wit. Yet in order to understand more deeply the modernity of this Shakespearean hero, Welsh first situates Hamlet within the context of family and mourning as it was presented in other revenge tragedies of Shakespeare's time. Revenge, he maintains, appears as a function of mourning rather than an end in itself. Welsh also reminds us that the mourning of a son for his father may not always be sincere. This book relates the problem of dubious mourning to Hamlet's ascendancy as an icon of Western culture, which began late in the eighteenth century, a time when the thinking of past generations-or fathers-represented to many an obstacle to human progress. Welsh reveals how Hamlet inspired some of the greatest practitioners of modernity's quintessential literary form, the novel. Goethe's Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship, Scott's Redgauntlet, Dickens's Great Expectations, Melville's Pierre, and Joyce's Ulysses all enhance our understanding of the play while illustrating a trend in which Hamlet ultimately becomes a model of intense consciousness. Arguing that modern consciousness mourns for the past, even as it pretends to be free of it, Welsh offers a compelling explanation of why Hamlet remains marvelously attractive to this day.
2020"
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