The Winter's Tale is Shakespeare's most perfectly realized tragi- comedy, as notable for its tragic intensity as for its comic grace and, throughout, for the richness and complexity of its poetry. It concludes, moreover, with the most daring and moving reconciliation scene in all Shakespeare's plays.
Though the title may suggest an escapist fantasy, recent criticism has seen in the play a profoundly realist psychology and a powerful commentary on the violence implicit in family relationships and deep, longlasting friendships. Stephen Orgel's edition considers the play in relation to Renaissance conceptions of both dramatic genre and the family, traces the changing critical and theatrical attitudes towards it, and places its psychological and dramatic conflicts within the Jacobean cultural and political context. The commentary pays special attention to the play's linguistic complexity, and the edition also includes a complete reprint of Shakespeare's source, Pandosto, by Robert Greene.
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Genres
Obscurity and Elucidation
Mysteries of State
Leontes' Jealousy
Motivation
Hermion's Trial
Mamillius' Death
Hermione's Death
Pastoral
Nature and Art
Marriage Negotiations
Autolycus
Paulina's Gallery
The Statue in the Chape
The Statue in the Theatre
What the Statue Does Not Say
The Date, Early Performances and the Text
Editorial Procedures
Abbreviations and References
THE WINTER' TALE
APPENDIX A
Simon forman's Account of 'The Winter's Tale'
APPENDIX B
Robert Greene's 'Pandosto'
APPENDIX C
The Music
Index
a valuable edition of The Winter's Tale. ... this is a well-focused and helpful edition. - Paul Hammond, Review of English Studies
ISBN : 9780199535910
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