How does an audience respond to a play in performance? In this essay I want to explore the question through an analysis of a scene widely regarded as the most brutal and disagreeable Shakespeare ever wrote, the blinding of Gloucester in King Lear (III. vii). The conventional wisdom about an audience faced with the scene is that they respond with horror and disgust and consequently condemn the perpetrators of such violence. This response may then be viewed in terms of the larger values the play explores. S. L. Goldberg offers a representative comment: "The sheer fact of the blinding and our sheer horrified rejection of it as unendurable lie at the very centre of the play." If this is true, is it only a matter of propriety that caused a serie...
This essay considers ways in which readings and performances of King Lear can respond to some of the...
Shakespeare’s King Lear is riven by troubled, and troubling, concerns with the efficacy of fiction t...
There is a distinct difference in the representation of violence and its aftermath in Shakespeareâ??...
King Lear cannot help filling the audience with a sense of helplessness and misery. Such a sense is ...
This article seeks to explore the different strategies the Bard uses in order to evoke sym...
From The Murder of Gonzago to Hamlet's pretence of madness, Hamlet is a work obsessed with acting an...
"So far from being Shakespeare's masterpiece, the play is most certainly an artistic failure." This ...
Critical interpretations of Hamlet are largely dependent upon the cultural zeitgeist that provides t...
The Tempest has spawned many widely divergent interpretations because its elusive, open-ended nature...
The question of audience (dis)unity has been a central, if not always explicit, element of the theo...
Since 1960, the need for performance-based criticism of Shakespeare's plays has been firmly establis...
This essay considers the use of Shakespeare as marker of authenticity and as a therapeutic space for...
Macbeth is not an obscure play. The course of the action, unlike that of Hamlet, can easily be summa...
"There's no art / To find the mind's construction in the face"so Duncan, before giving further insta...
If the title of this essay looks vaguely familiar, that is as it should be. It echoes, with delibera...
This essay considers ways in which readings and performances of King Lear can respond to some of the...
Shakespeare’s King Lear is riven by troubled, and troubling, concerns with the efficacy of fiction t...
There is a distinct difference in the representation of violence and its aftermath in Shakespeareâ??...
King Lear cannot help filling the audience with a sense of helplessness and misery. Such a sense is ...
This article seeks to explore the different strategies the Bard uses in order to evoke sym...
From The Murder of Gonzago to Hamlet's pretence of madness, Hamlet is a work obsessed with acting an...
"So far from being Shakespeare's masterpiece, the play is most certainly an artistic failure." This ...
Critical interpretations of Hamlet are largely dependent upon the cultural zeitgeist that provides t...
The Tempest has spawned many widely divergent interpretations because its elusive, open-ended nature...
The question of audience (dis)unity has been a central, if not always explicit, element of the theo...
Since 1960, the need for performance-based criticism of Shakespeare's plays has been firmly establis...
This essay considers the use of Shakespeare as marker of authenticity and as a therapeutic space for...
Macbeth is not an obscure play. The course of the action, unlike that of Hamlet, can easily be summa...
"There's no art / To find the mind's construction in the face"so Duncan, before giving further insta...
If the title of this essay looks vaguely familiar, that is as it should be. It echoes, with delibera...
This essay considers ways in which readings and performances of King Lear can respond to some of the...
Shakespeare’s King Lear is riven by troubled, and troubling, concerns with the efficacy of fiction t...
There is a distinct difference in the representation of violence and its aftermath in Shakespeareâ??...