Coriolanus by Anita Pacheco

Coriolanus by Anita Pacheco

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Summary

This book offers a stimulating new reading of Shakespeare’s last tragedy.

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Coriolanus by Anita Pacheco

This book offers a stimulating new reading of Shakespeare’s last tragedy. It situates the play within its own historical period and presents a lucid reappraisal of its representation of class conflict. One of the book’s central arguments is that in adapting Plutarch’s ‘Life of Caius Martius Coriolanus’ for the stage, Shakespeare smoothed out the radical political edges of his source, transforming its history of ruling-class oppression into a tragedy focused on the internal contradictions of aristocratic honour. The book also provides a re-valuation of Volumnia’s role in the play, arguing that she is depicted neither as a bad mother nor an unfeminine woman but as the embodiment of a Roman ideal of aristocratic motherhood. The final chapter examines the way this most political of Shakespeare’s plays has been regularly revived and appropriated during periods of political crisis. Paying close attention to context, language, genre and dramatic structure, this lively study will appeal both to general and specialist readers.
Anita Pacheco is a Lecturer in the Literature Department at The Open University. She has published widely on Aphra Behn and is the editor of A Companion to Early Modern Women’s Writing (Blackwell, 2002)
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780746311479
ISBN 10 0746311478
Title Coriolanus
Author Anita Pacheco
Series Writers And Their Work
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Liverpool University Press
Year published 2007-12-01
Number of pages 132
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.