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James S. Shapiro

    James S. Shapiro est un érudit de premier plan sur Shakespeare et la période moderne ancienne. Son travail plonge en profondeur dans les textes et les contextes des pièces de Shakespeare, éclairant les complexités de la culture élisabéthaine. Shapiro se caractérise par son approche analytique perspicace, offrant aux lecteurs de nouvelles perspectives sur des œuvres durables et leur milieu historique.

    Shakespeare and the Jews
    • Shakespeare and the Jews

      • 317pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Going against the grain of the dominant scholarship on the period, which generally ignores the impact of Jewish questions in early modern England, James Shapiro shows how Elizabethans imagined Jews to be utterly different from themselves - in religion, race, nationality, and even sexuality. From strange cases of Christians masquerading as Jews to bizarre proposals to settle foreign Jews in Ireland, Shakespeare and the Jews looks into the crisis of cultural identity in that post-Reformation world.Even as Shakespeare has come to embody Englishness itself, The Merchant of Venice, with its exploration of Jewish criminality, conversion, race, alien status, and national identity, now stands at the crossroads of cultural exclusion and cultural longing. In this formidably researched new book, Shapiro sheds fascinating light on the work of Shakespeare and his contemporaries and opens new questions about culture and identity in Elizabethan England.

      Shakespeare and the Jews1995