Shakespeare’s Foreign Queens, 1st ed. 2018
Drama, Politics, and the Enemy Within

Queenship and Power Series

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Language: English

79.11 €

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This book examines Shakespeare?s depiction of foreign queens as he uses them to reveal and embody tensions within early modern English politics. Linking early modern and contemporary political theory and concerns through the concepts of fragmented identity, hospitality, citizenship, and banishment, Sandra Logan takes up a set of questions not widely addressed by scholars of early modern queenship. How does Shakespeare?s representation of these queens challenge the opposition between friend and enemy that ostensibly defines the context of the political? And how do these queens expose the abusive potential of the sovereign? Focusing on Katherine of Aragon in Henry VIII, Hermione in The Winter?s Tale, Tamora in Titus Andronicus, and Margaret in the first history tetralogy, Logan considers them as means for exploring conditions of vulnerability, alienation, and exclusion common to subjects of every social position, exposing the sovereign himself as the true enemy of the state.
1. Introduction: Foreign Queens, Abusive Sovereignty, and Political Authority in the Past and the Present.- 2.Katherine of Aragon's Fragmented Identity in Henry VIII.- 3. The Friend, the Enemy, the Wife, and the Guest: Conditional and Unconditional Hospitality in The Winter's Tale.- 4. Strange Bedfellows: Friend, Enemy, and the Commonweal in Titus Andronicus.- 5. Margaret and the Ban: Resistances to Sovereign Authority in Henry VI 1, 2, & 3 and Richard III.
Sandra Logan is Associate Professor of Early Modern Literature and Culture in the Department of English at Michigan State University, USA, and Director of the Citizen Scholars Program for the MSU College of Arts and Letters.
Present an innovative focus on foreign queens in Shakespeare Brings together questions of early modern and contemporary political theory, early modern queenship, and themes of identity and alterity, hospitality and exile Appeals to scholars of political theory, feminist theory, Shakespeare, and early modern English history