Buch, Englisch, 432 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm
Buch, Englisch, 432 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm
ISBN: 978-0-19-791432-8
Verlag: Oxford University Press
To ask, with Hamlet, the deceptively simple question 'what is the cause?', is, as this study demonstrates, to get to the heart of some of the early-modern period's most resonant, far-reaching, and contested topics. It is a question that informs everything from the largest metaphysical enquiries to the tiniest instances of particulate physics, asking what this study shows to be one of the most pertinent questions of a philosophically ambitious, intellectually aspirational, theologically destabilized age.
Taking King Lear as its focus, this book situates Shakespeare and his world-weary tragedy at the intersection of major epistemic trajectories in philosophical, religious, and scientific thought. Shakespeare's play, it argues, was produced at a crisis-point, a crux at which confidence in an older metaphysical order was being incrementally eroded, and was yet to be recuperated by the advent of the 'new' physics and later natural-scientific philosophies. Shakespeare writes, in short, at a moment of profound causal uncertainty, conscious of cultural change, and yet not confident of the wisdom of his age's purported progress. Consequently, King Lear is shown to be a play riven by causal scepticism and deep-seated intellectual doubt, in which Shakespeare cycles through a rich array of classical analogues, philosophical influences, biblical sources, and literary intertexts, finding each unfit for the Machiavellian machinations and politic purposes of an incipient modern age.
This ambitious and far-reaching study offers a new understanding of Shakespeare's philosophical underpinnings, illuminating his active, informed participation in an aetiological debate that should be understood as the key epistemological enquiry of his time.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
- Introduction: Is there any cause in nature.?: Lear's causal questions
- I. Renaissance Causality
- 1: What is a cause?: Classical to early-modern aetiologies
- 2: It is the cause, it is the cause: Causality before Lear
- II. Lear's Causes
- Introduction: Let go the gods: Lear's Senecan analogues
- 3: Bastards and Machiavels: Self-motivation in King Lear [Act One]
- 4: What is the cause of thunder?: Lear in the storm [Acts Two and Three]
- 5: The promised end?: The consolations of causality [Acts Four and Five]
- Epilogue: Just causes: Setting causes straight in Pericles




