Subjects of Advice
eBook - PDF

Subjects of Advice

Drama and Counsel from More to Shakespeare

  1. 260 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Subjects of Advice

Drama and Counsel from More to Shakespeare

Book details
Table of contents
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About This Book

In Subjects of Advice, Ivan Lupi? uncovers the rich interconnectedness of dramatic art and the culture of counsel in the early modern period. While counsel was an important form of practical knowledge, with concrete political consequences, it was also an ingrained cultural habit, a feature of obligatory mental, moral, and political hygiene. To be a Renaissance subject, Lupi? claims, one had to reckon with the advice of others. Lupi? examines this reckoning in a variety of sixteenth-century dramatic contexts. The result is an original account of the foundational role that counsel played in the development of Renaissance drama.Lupi? begins by considering the figure of Thomas More, whose influential argument about counsel as a form of performance in Utopia set the agenda for the entire century. Resisting linear narratives and recovering, instead, the simultaneity of radically different kinds of dramatic experience, he shows the vitality of later dramatic engagements with More's legacy through an analysis of the moral interlude staged within Sir Thomas More, a play possibly coauthored by Shakespeare. More also helps explain the complex use of counsel in Senecan drama, from the neo-Latin plays of George Buchanan, discussed in connection with Buchanan's political writings, to the historical tragedies of the mid-sixteenth century.If tyranny and exemplarity are the keywords for early Elizabethan drama of counsel, for the plays of Christopher Marlowe it is friendship. Lupi? considers Marlowe's interest in friendship and counsel, most notably in Edward II, alongside earlier dramatic treatments, thus exposing the pervasive fantasy of the ideal counselor as another self. Subjects of Advice concludes by placing King Lear in relation to its dramatic sources to demonstrate Shakespeare's deliberate dispersal of counsel throughout his play. Counsel's customary link to plain and fearless speech becomes in Shakespeare's hands a powerful instrument of poetic and dramatic expression.

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Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. SUBJECTS OF ADVICE
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. CONTENTS
  7. Introduction
  8. Chapter 1. Playing Good Counsel
  9. Chapter 2. Counsel’s Tyranny
  10. Chapter 3. Governed by Examples
  11. Chapter 4. Vehemently Pressed
  12. Chapter 5. Words Out of Season
  13. Conclusion
  14. Notes
  15. Bibliography
  16. Index
  17. Acknowledgments