Cover of Paula Blank: Shakesplish

Paula Blank Shakesplish

How We Read Shakespeare's Language

Price for Eshop: 844 Kč (€ 33.8)

VAT 0% included

New

E-book delivered electronically online

E-Book information

Stanford University Press

2018

EPub, PDF
How do I buy e-book?

232

978-1-5036-0758-3

1-5036-0758-5

Annotation

For all that we love and admire Shakespeare, he is not that easy to grasp. He may have written in Elizabethan English, but when we read him, we can't help but understand his words, metaphors, and syntax in relation to our own. Until now, explaining the powers and pleasures of the Bard's language has always meant returning it to its original linguistic and rhetorical contexts. Countless excellent studies situate his unusual gift for words in relation to the resources of the English of his day. They may mention the presumptions of modern readers, but their goal is to correct and invalidate any false impressions. Shakesplish is the first book devoted to our experience as modern readers of Early Modern English. Drawing on translation theory and linguistics, Paula Blank argues that for us, Shakespeare's language is a hybrid English composed of errors in comprehension-and that such errors enable, rather than hinder, some of the pleasures we take in his language. Investigating how and why it strikes us, by turns, as beautiful, funny, sexy, or smart, she shows how, far from being the fossilized remains of an older idiom, Shakespeare's English is also our own.

Ask question

You can ask us about this book and we'll send an answer to your e-mail.