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Shakespeare, the Sea and the Stage

Peter Womack
Barcode 9781399539500
Paperback

Original price £19.45 - Original price £19.45
Original price
£19.45
£19.45 - £19.45
Current price £19.45

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Release Date: 31/08/2026

Genre: Poetry & Drama
Sub-Genre: Literary Criticism
Label: Edinburgh University Press
Series: Edinburgh Critical Studies in Renaissance Culture
Language: English
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Explores the idea that Shakespeare's dramatic writing, which powerfully represents the sea, also resembles it.
The sea for Shakespeare is both a location and a metaphor; and either way it affords him an extraordinary freedom of invention, releasing whatever in the plays is vast, fluid and unceasing. It is also a defining element of his historical context: he lived and worked a few yards from one of the great maritime rivers of the world, and for much of his career England was engaged in a naval war with Spain. So the Shakespearean sea invites two distinct perspectives – poetics and history, the conventional literary symbol and the contingent economic struggle. This book embraces both of them together, tracing the intricate connections between them, and showing how they meet, above all, on the stage. It was in the Elizabethan playhouse that commercial enterprise, physical confinement and boundless rhetoric interacted to generate an imaginative energy whose waves can still be fel.