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Shakespeare and the Idea of Late Writing: Authorship in the Proximity of Death

Shakespeare and the Idea of Late Writing: Authorship in the Proximity of Death

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Gordon McMullan
Cambridge University Press, 12/6/2007
EAN 9780521863049, ISBN10: 052186304X

Hardcover, 414 pages, 23.4 x 16.2 x 3.1 cm
Language: English

What do we mean when we speak of the 'late style' of a given writer, artist or composer? And what exactly do we mean by 'late Shakespeare'? Gordon McMullan argues that, far from being a natural phenomenon common to a handful of geniuses in old age or in proximity to death, late style is in fact a critical construct. Taking Shakespeare as his exemplar, he maps the development of the 'discourse of lateness' from the eighteenth century to the present, noting not only the mismatch between that discourse and the actual conditions for authorship in early modern theatre but also its generativity for subsequent projections of creative selfhood. He thus offers the first critique of the idea of late style, which will be of interest not only to literature specialists but also to art historians, musicologists and anyone curious about the relationship of creativity to old age and to death.

Introduction
1. Shakespeare and the idea of late writing
2. The Shakespearean caesura
genre, chronology, style
3. The invention of late Shakespeare
subjectivism and its discontents
4. Last words / late plays
the possibility and impossibility of late Shakespeare in early modern culture and theatre
5. How old is 'late'?
late Shakespeare, old age, King Lear
6. The Tempest and the uses of late Shakespeare in the theatre
Gielgud, Rylance, Prospero.

Reviews of the hardback: 'Gordon McMullan's Shakespeare and the Idea of Late Writing is easily the best critical study of Shakespeare to appear this year. Packed with insights both theoretical and historical - and ranging from Edmond Malone to Henry James to Edward Said - it's the kind of book that literary scholars (as well as art and music historians) will want to keep close at hand.'  James Shapiro, Columbia University and author of 1599