Shakespeare, the Reformation and the interpreting self

    Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

    Abstract

    We share with Shakespeare, it seems, the assumption that to be human is to be an interpreter of oneself, others and the world – seeking but not always arriving at understanding. Shakespeare, the Reformation and the Interpreting Self explores this perspective on human subjectivity. This study reads the complex, compelling representations of the self as an interpreter (and misinterpreter) of reality in Shakespeare’s ‘problem plays’ alongside an intellectual history that links the culture-shaping theological hermeneutics of the playwright’s day to the similarly influential philosophical hermeneutics of our times. What is it to be an interpreting self? This book’s critical approach brings to the fore questions about the self’s finitude, agency, motivations, self-knowledge and ethical relation to others, questions that were of great relevance in Shakespeare’s England and which continue to resonate in our present-day dilemmas and debates about human experience and human being.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationEdinburgh
    PublisherEdinburgh University Press
    Number of pages432
    ISBN (Electronic)9781474461979, 9781474461962
    ISBN (Print)9781474461948
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2023

    Publication series

    NameEdinburgh Critical Studies in Shakespeare and Philosophy
    PublisherEdinburgh University Press

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