Overview
Shakespeare's plays are works of art made out of words. To read the
plays closely, that is, to pay careful attention to the multiple,
shifting meanings of and relationships between their words, is to gain a
deep and lasting appreciation for the complex artistry of their
construction and of their effects. In fourteen chapters, the book takes
readers on a guided tour through some of the most productive sites in
Shakespeare's plays for analysis, providing an introduction to the
practice of reading Shakespeare's plays closely, and some examples of
the interpretive work that such close reading can enable.
Topics
of analysis include verbal patterning, dramatic structure, staging and
stage directions, soliloquies and character-construction and poetic
meter. This is an ideal teaching text for introductory courses on
Shakespeare. Offering a wide range of examples from nearly all of
Shakespeare's plays, it will give students the analytical tools they
need to develop sustained close readings of their own.