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Reading Shakespeare's Will

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The most influential treatments of Shakespeare's Sonnets have ignored the impact of theology on his poetics, examining instead the poet's "secular" emphasis on psychology and subjectivity. Reading ...
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  • 30 January 2002
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The most influential treatments of Shakespeare's Sonnets have ignored the impact of theology on his poetics, examining instead the poet's "secular" emphasis on psychology and subjectivity. Reading Shakespeare's Will offers the first systematic account of the theology behind the poetry. Investigating the poetic stakes of Christianity's efforts to assimilate Jewish scripture, the book reads Shakespeare through the history of Christian allegory.

To "read Shakespeare's will," Freinkel argues, is to read his bequest to and from a literary history saturated by religious doctrine. Freinkel thus challenges the common equation of subjectivity with secularity, and defines Shakespeare's poetic voice in theological rather than psychoanalytic terms. Tracing from Augustine to Luther the religious legacy that informs Shakespeare's work, Freinkel suggests that we cannot properly understand his poetry without recognizing it as a response to Luther's Reformation. Delving into the valences and repercussions of this response, Reading Shakespeare's Will charts the notion of a "theology of figure" that helped to shape the themes, tropes, and formal structures of Renaissance literature and thought.

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Price: $40.00
Pages: 416
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 30 January 2002
ISBN: 9780231123259
Format: Paperback
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / European / General, PERFORMING ARTS / Theater / General
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Freinkel brilliantly reorganizes our understanding of "modern" subjectivity as expressed in Shakespeare's supposedly Petrarchan poetry... what this book accomplishes is a major shift in out understanding of Renaissance lyric.
Lisa Freinkel is assistant professor of English at the University of Oregon.

Preface
Bibliography
1. Augustine Under the Fig Tree
2. Petrarch in the Shade of the Laurel
3. Luther Disfiguring the Word
4. Willful Abuse: The Canker and the Rose
5. Will's Bondage: Anti-Semitism and "The Merchant of Venice"