The Tempest (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)
Cambridge University Press
Edition: New Ed, 2002-04-01
EAN 9780521293747, ISBN10: 052129374X
Hardcover, 277 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm
The Tempest is one of the most suggestive, yet most elusive of all Shakespeare’s plays, and has provoked a wide range of critical interpretation. It is a magical romance, yet deeply and problematically embedded in seventeenth-century debates about authority and power. David Lindley’s Introduction and commentary focus upon contemporary texts, attending to the implications of Prospero’s magic, his political and paternal ambitions, and the controversial issue of his ‘colonialist’ control of Caliban. The Tempest was also Shakespeare’s response to the new opportunities offered by the Blackfriars theatre, and careful attention is given to the play’s dramatic form, stage-craft, and use of music and spectacle, to demonstrate its uniquely experimental nature.
'If you are looking for a model edition - by which I mean one that is concerned to honour the text and to explain the processes involved in editing - this is it. If I were ever again to undertake the editing of a Shakespeare play, I would keep Lindley's edition of The Tempest open beside me.' Peter Thompson 'David Lindley's Tempest is the best edition on the market and the paperback is a snip.' Studies in Theatre and Performance 'Lindley aims both to represent and to explain the range of readings given the play in its theatrical and critical afterlives. His edition meets the high standards of the series in an exemplary manner, offering an especially fine introduction that focuses on the elusiveness of The Tempest, a feature that has made it central to late-twentieth-century criticism.' Barbara Hodgdon, Studies in English Literature 'David Lindley's edition of The Tempest is easily the most outstanding version of this ostensibly straightforward yet hugely teasing play produced over the last thirty years. Its precise and scrupulous commentary notes are careful to the variety of ways the text can be spoken on stage. Its notes on the music and songs are admirably evocative, and its economical account of the huge range of critical views will send thousands of readers out in fruitful chases after the play's own multitudinous interests.' Andrew Gurr, editor of the forthcoming New Variorum 'Tempest'