Shakespeare's Nature

From Cultivation to Culture

Charlotte Scott author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:30th Jan '14

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Shakespeare's Nature cover

Shakespeare's Nature offers the first sustained account of the impact of the language and practice of husbandry on Shakespeare's work. It shows how the early modern discourse of cultivation changes attitude to the natural world, and traces the interrelationships between the human and the natural worlds in Shakespeare's work through dramatic and poetic models of intervention, management, prudence and profit. Ranging from the Sonnets to The Tempest, the book explains how cultivation of the land responds to and reinforces social welfare, and reveals the extent to which the dominant industry of Shakespeare's time shaped a new language of social relations. Beginning with an examination of the rise in the production of early modern printed husbandry manuals, Shakespeare's Nature draws on the varied fields of economic, agrarian, humanist, Christian and literary studies, showing how the language of husbandry redefined Elizabethan attitudes to both the human and non-human worlds. In a series of close readings of specific plays and poems, this book explains how cultivation forms and develops social and economic value systems, and how the early modern imagination was dependent on metaphors of investment, nurture and growth. By tracing this language of intervention and creation in Shakespeare's work, this book reveals a fundamental discourse in the development of early modern social, political and personal values.

A thorough and cohesive study that confidently asserts the importance of the language of husbandry and cultivation to Shakespeares work, while opening up future directions for research. * Early Theatre *
Scott demonstrates the unique significance that allusions to husbandry have in Shakespeare's oeuvre; she offers equally convincing evidence of the need to reconsider the cultural impact of early modern husbandry on Renaissance art as a whole. * Hannan Leah Crumme, The Times Literary Supplement *
Shakespeare's Nature offers a rich resource for scholars * Katherine Haynes, Sixteenth Century Journal *
Shakespeareans should take notice ... [a] learned and densely written book. * Rebecca Bushnell, Shakespeare Quarterly *

ISBN: 9780199685080

Dimensions: 227mm x 145mm x 24mm

Weight: 460g

268 pages