Shakespeare and the Art of Lying

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, British
Cover of the book Shakespeare and the Art of Lying by Shormishtha Panja, Orient Blackswan Private Limited
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Shormishtha Panja ISBN: 9788125055068
Publisher: Orient Blackswan Private Limited Publication: October 27, 2014
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Shormishtha Panja
ISBN: 9788125055068
Publisher: Orient Blackswan Private Limited
Publication: October 27, 2014
Imprint:
Language: English
Questions of truth, untruth, representation and deception were pivotal to sixteenth and seventeenth century thought. Be it Machiavelli, More or Montaigne, writers and philosophers struggled with questions of lying and truth-telling, and how truth is constructed and performed. But what view did Shakespeare subscribe to? What notions of falsehood, and, axiomatically, of truth, emerge from a reading of his works? This collection of essays from scholars such as Stuart Sillars, Coppélia Kahn, Supriya Chaudhuri, Bijoy Boruah, R. W. Desai, Gert Hofmann and Shormishtha Panja explores the many facets of lies, deception, truth and half-truth that feature so prominently in well-known plays such as Hamlet, King Lear, Twelfth Night and A Midsummer Night’s Dream and inShakespeare’s Sonnets and poems. From philosophy to physiognomy, from fictionality to reality, the essays are as varied as revealing. While the book explores the subversive potential of speech in the context of gender and class in Othello, there is also an analysis of ‘The Phoenix and the Turtle,’ one of Shakespeare’s lesser-known works. From examining visages of truth and deception in Hamlet, drawing on early modern discourses of face-reading, to reading Shakespeare in light of Nietzschean truth and falsehood and theories of mimesis and verisimilitude—these essays analyse how complex and textured Shakespeare’s engagement with lying is.  In addition, the essayists pull into their orbit writers as varied as Plato, St. Augustine, Erasmus, Castiglione, and Franz Kafka.Enlightening for the student and scholar alike, Shakespeare and the Art of Lying examines Shakespeare’s words from a hitherto unexplored angle, and raises new questions about the art of representation and dissimulation, and the rhetorical practices of truth and falsehood.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Questions of truth, untruth, representation and deception were pivotal to sixteenth and seventeenth century thought. Be it Machiavelli, More or Montaigne, writers and philosophers struggled with questions of lying and truth-telling, and how truth is constructed and performed. But what view did Shakespeare subscribe to? What notions of falsehood, and, axiomatically, of truth, emerge from a reading of his works? This collection of essays from scholars such as Stuart Sillars, Coppélia Kahn, Supriya Chaudhuri, Bijoy Boruah, R. W. Desai, Gert Hofmann and Shormishtha Panja explores the many facets of lies, deception, truth and half-truth that feature so prominently in well-known plays such as Hamlet, King Lear, Twelfth Night and A Midsummer Night’s Dream and inShakespeare’s Sonnets and poems. From philosophy to physiognomy, from fictionality to reality, the essays are as varied as revealing. While the book explores the subversive potential of speech in the context of gender and class in Othello, there is also an analysis of ‘The Phoenix and the Turtle,’ one of Shakespeare’s lesser-known works. From examining visages of truth and deception in Hamlet, drawing on early modern discourses of face-reading, to reading Shakespeare in light of Nietzschean truth and falsehood and theories of mimesis and verisimilitude—these essays analyse how complex and textured Shakespeare’s engagement with lying is.  In addition, the essayists pull into their orbit writers as varied as Plato, St. Augustine, Erasmus, Castiglione, and Franz Kafka.Enlightening for the student and scholar alike, Shakespeare and the Art of Lying examines Shakespeare’s words from a hitherto unexplored angle, and raises new questions about the art of representation and dissimulation, and the rhetorical practices of truth and falsehood.

More books from Orient Blackswan Private Limited

Cover of the book Desire and Defiance by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Looking for the Aryans by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Sacrificing People by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Vinegar King and Hot Soup by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Travels to Europe by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Science and National Consciousness in Bengal 1870 1930 by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book History of the Social Determinants of Health by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Matched Winners by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book History of Classical Sanskrit Literature by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Health Policy in Britain's Model Colony -Ceylon (1900-1948) by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Journeys and Dwellings by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Born to Dance by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Son of the Moment by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book The Hungry Emperor and The Clever Barber by Shormishtha Panja
Cover of the book Selected Works of C. Rajagopalachari by Shormishtha Panja
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy