To speak of justice in Shakespeare\u27s plays without speaking of the sovereign may seem like playing Hamlet without the Prince. In Shakespeare\u27s time, the sovereign was the ultimate symbolic source of justice, as seen in the iconographic conflation of Queen Elizabeth I with Astraea, the goddess of Justice. Perhaps Shakespeare\u27s deepest meditation on what makes a just ruler lies in the four plays scholars have dubbed the Henriad (Richard II; Henry IV, Part 1; Henry IV, Part 2; and Henry V). In these plays, we follow the development of the dissolute youth Prince Hal as he matures into the paradigmatic good ruler, Henry V. The four plays have an epic structure (the tetralogy is called the Henriad to mimic the Iliad), telling the story o...
Shakespeare, interpreting late medieval English history from the ages of Geoffrey and Thomas Chaucer...
English culture and politics in the last decade of the sixteenth century were both patriarchal and p...
In Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2 Shakespeare provides an image of the unifying function of law in a disjoi...
To speak of justice in Shakespeare\u27s plays without speaking of the sovereign may seem like playin...
Shakespeare’s Henriad delves into questions of divine authority, political process, and the role of ...
Shakespeare was quite conscious of the working of power “apparatus” due to his presence in Queen Eli...
One of Shakespeare’s most commendable qualities as a playwright is the ability to create dynamic cha...
Richard II, Henry IV Part One, Henry IV Part II, and Henry V form the second of Shakespeare’s two hi...
Henry IV Part 1 might reasonably be expected to be the subject of even more intense critical disagre...
[Introduction] In Shakespeare’s history Henry V, the playwright depicts the reign of King Harry— sp...
William Shakespeare's plays, Richard II, 1 and 2 Henry IV and Henry V, form a tetralogy in which the...
Previous criticism of Shakespeare’s Hal/Henry V as a “madcap prince” and fraudulent king is unjust. ...
The Henry IV plays are distinguished among Shakespeare's Histories by their range and their exuberan...
The first title for Shakespeare’s Henry VIII—All Is True—may reflect standard early modern usage sig...
The English history play reached its highest peak of development between 1595 and 1599, for it was d...
Shakespeare, interpreting late medieval English history from the ages of Geoffrey and Thomas Chaucer...
English culture and politics in the last decade of the sixteenth century were both patriarchal and p...
In Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2 Shakespeare provides an image of the unifying function of law in a disjoi...
To speak of justice in Shakespeare\u27s plays without speaking of the sovereign may seem like playin...
Shakespeare’s Henriad delves into questions of divine authority, political process, and the role of ...
Shakespeare was quite conscious of the working of power “apparatus” due to his presence in Queen Eli...
One of Shakespeare’s most commendable qualities as a playwright is the ability to create dynamic cha...
Richard II, Henry IV Part One, Henry IV Part II, and Henry V form the second of Shakespeare’s two hi...
Henry IV Part 1 might reasonably be expected to be the subject of even more intense critical disagre...
[Introduction] In Shakespeare’s history Henry V, the playwright depicts the reign of King Harry— sp...
William Shakespeare's plays, Richard II, 1 and 2 Henry IV and Henry V, form a tetralogy in which the...
Previous criticism of Shakespeare’s Hal/Henry V as a “madcap prince” and fraudulent king is unjust. ...
The Henry IV plays are distinguished among Shakespeare's Histories by their range and their exuberan...
The first title for Shakespeare’s Henry VIII—All Is True—may reflect standard early modern usage sig...
The English history play reached its highest peak of development between 1595 and 1599, for it was d...
Shakespeare, interpreting late medieval English history from the ages of Geoffrey and Thomas Chaucer...
English culture and politics in the last decade of the sixteenth century were both patriarchal and p...
In Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2 Shakespeare provides an image of the unifying function of law in a disjoi...