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Plato's Republic and Shakespeare's Rome

A Political Study of the Roman Works

Barbara L. Parker
Barcode 9781611492491
Hardback

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Original price £106.17 - Original price £106.17
Original price
£106.17
£106.17 - £106.17
Current price £106.17

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Out of stock

Release Date: 01/04/2004

Genre: Literary Criticism
Label: University of Delaware Press
Language: English
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

A Political Study of the Roman Works
This pioneering study argues the influence of Plato's political thought on Shakespeare's Roman works: The Rape of Lucrece, Coriolanus, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, and Titus Andronicus. It contends that Plato's theory of constitutional decline provides the philosophical core of these works; that Lucrece, Coriolanus, Julius Caesar, and Antony and Cleopatra form a 'Platonic' tetralogy collectively spanning the stages of timocracy, oligarchy, democracy, and tyranny; that this decline is prefigured and encapsulated in Titus Andronicus; and that all five works are oblique commentaries on England's political milieu. Shakespeare equates the ruin of Rome with what he foresees as the corresponding decline of England deriving from England's kindred political ills, in particular the burgeoning democratic impulses fostered by the politics of both Elizabeth and James—impulses potentially leading to popular rule and the ruin of the state.