The Third Citizen bookcover

The Third Citizen

Shakespeare's Theater and the Early Modern House of Commons
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Description

The new practices and theories of parliamentary representation that emerged during Elizabeth's and James' reigns shattered the unity of human agency, redefined the nature of power, transformed the image of the body politic, and unsettled constructs and concepts as fundamental as the relation between presence and absence.

In The Third Citizen, Oliver Arnold argues that recovering the formation of political representation as an effective ideology should radically change our understanding of early modern political culture, Shakespeare's political art, and the way Anglo-American critics, for whom representative democracy is second nature, construe both. In magisterial readings of Titus Andronicus, Julius Caesar, Coriolanus, and the First Tetralogy, Arnold discovers a new Shakespeare who was neither a conservative apologist for monarchy nor a prescient, liberal champion of the House of Commons but instead a radical thinker and artist who demystified the ideology of political representation in the moment of its first flowering. Shakespeare believed that political representation produced (and required for its reproduction) a new kind of subject and a new kind of subjectivity, and he fashioned a new kind of tragedy to represent the loss of power, the fall from dignity, the false consciousness, and the grief peculiar to the experiences of representing and of being represented. Representationalism and its subject mark the beginning of political modernity; Shakespeare's tragedies greet political representationalism with skepticism, bleakness, and despair.

Product Details

PublisherJohns Hopkins University Press
Publish DateMarch 01, 2007
Pages328
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconHardback
EAN/UPC9780801885044
Dimensions6.4 X 9.2 X 1.0 inches | 1.3 pounds

About the Author

Oliver Arnold is an associate professor of English at Princeton University.

Reviews

A compelling historical refinement . . . Recommended.

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