Reading Shakespeare's Dramatic Language

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Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2000-12-14
Publisher(s): Bloomsbury Arden Shakespeare
List Price: $32.05

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Summary

This accessible and interdisciplinary volume addresses a fundamental need in current education in language, literature and drama. Many of today's students lack the grammatical and linguistic skills to enable them to study Shakespearean and other Renaissance texts as closely as their courses require. This practical guide will help them to understand and use the structures and strategies of written and dramatic language. Eleven short essays on aspects of literary criticism and performance by an eminent team of contributors are followed by a more detailed exploration of the history of language use, grammar and spelling, plus a glossary of terms offering definitions, contexts and examples. Together these provide an informed and engaging historical understanding of dramatic language in the early modern period.

Table of Contents

List of contributors
vii
List of abbreviations for works by Shakespeare
ix
Preface xi
PART I: THE LANGUAGE OF SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS 1(188)
Introduction
3(2)
Heightened language
5(12)
Ann Thompson
Style, rhetoric and decorum
17(14)
Lynne Magnusson
The grand style
31(20)
Sylvia Adamson
Shakespeare's metre scanned
51(20)
George T. Wright
Puns and parody
71(18)
Walter Nash
Description
89(13)
William C. Carroll
Narrative
102(11)
David Scott Kastan
Persuasion
113(17)
Lynette Hunter
Dialogue
130(14)
Lynne Magnusson
Characters in order of appearance
144(14)
Pamela Mason
Shakespeare's language in the theatre
158(15)
Peter Lichtenfels
Language and the body
173(16)
Keir Elam
PART II: READING SHAKESPEARE'S ENGLISH 189(80)
Introduction
191(1)
Varieties and variation
192(18)
Katie Wales
`Standard' English
192(2)
Regional dialect
194(2)
Social variation: sociolects
196(4)
English and nationhood
200(2)
English and Latin
202(1)
Occupational dialects
203(1)
Register and situational variation
204(2)
Thou and you: social, emotional and rhetorical variation
206(1)
Individual variation or idiolects
207(3)
Understanding Shakespeare's grammar: studies in small words
210(46)
Sylvia Adamson
Introduction: choice and change
210(2)
And or an (meaning `if')
212(2)
His or it (meaning `its')
214(4)
May
218(5)
Shall
223(3)
Thou
226(6)
That, this, thus, there
232(7)
Shakespeare's new wordsTerttu Nevalainen
237
Compounding
239(2)
Conversion
241(3)
Affixation
244(12)
Shakespeare's sounds
256(13)
Roger Lass
Prologue: `difference' and variability
256(2)
Syllable-count and stress
258(4)
Rhyme and betrayal
262(3)
Some further details
265(2)
Epilogue
267(2)
PART III: RESOURCES FOR READERS 269(47)
An A-Z of rhetorical terms
271(31)
Katie Wales
A guide to further reading
302(14)
Index 316

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