Selected Product: | Othello (Signet Classic Shakespeare) Paperback Edition: Revised Author: William Shakespeare Publisher: Signet Classics Release Date: 1998-04-01 ISBN-10: 0451526856 ISBN-13: 9780451526854 List Price: $4.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Hamlet (Cambridge School Shakespeare) ISBN-10: 0521618746 ISBN-13: 9780521618748 List Price:$9.00 The Tragedy of Macbeth (Oxford World's Classics) ISBN-10: 0192834177 ISBN-13: 9780192834171 List Price:$10.95 The Merchant of Venice (Oxford World's Classics) ISBN-10: 019283424X ISBN-13: 9780192834249 List Price:$10.95 The Tempest (Signet Classics) ISBN-10: 0451527127 ISBN-13: 9780451527127 List Price:$4.95 King Lear (Shakespeare Made Easy) ISBN-10: 0812036379 ISBN-13: 9780812036374 List Price:$6.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Othello (Signet Classic Shakespeare) by William Shakespeare (ISBN-10: 0451526856, ISBN-13: 9780451526854). At this time we have not yet written a review for Othello (Signet Classic Shakespeare) by William Shakespeare (ISBN-10: 0451526856, ISBN-13: 9780451526854). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Good Will, really bad commentary (Signet Classic) | Customer Rating: | Forty-plus years ago, when I first started reading Shakespeare, I liked the Signet Classic editions.
They were cheap and handy, and the play texts were just about right for a beginner: clear, with an indication of variant and disputed readings without overwhelming the play; a simple, convenient way of glossing the hard words; and useful short explications of some of the allusions.
Recently, preparing to go see a production of "Othello," I picked up the Signet Classic version to re-read, and I did something I had not done in my student days: I read the supporting material.
The background to the original staging and Renaissance playcraft was unexceptionable, but when I got to the "new dramatic criticism," I was appalled.
Not all of it was new. Of three essays, two dated from 1956 and 1960 and no doubt were part of the first issue in 1963. These were tedious and obvious, just the sort of thing that took all the enjoyment out of studying Shakespeare in school.
The third, dated 1980, had been added to pander to current campus fads -- not something you need when reading a Jacobean text. The editors got a three-fer: an essay by Madelon Sprengnether that coughed up psychoanalysis, feminism and PoMo French-Belgian trendiness in a convenient but indigestible hairball.
It's hard to imagine that still in 1980, people were taking Freud seriously and disgusting to see Shakespeare subjected to Belgian Nazis. Of the feminism, all I can say is that sometimes a sword is just a sword.
I have read a fair amount of Shakespeare criticism and liked little of it. But until Sprengnether, none of it disgusted me.
The copy I picked up second-hand dated from 1986. No doubt in the two decades since, more "new criticism" has been added to keep up with the dumbing down of the campuses. To 21st century students, here's some advice. You will be better off doing what I used to do: Stick by the big fish and let his remoras tag along unheeded.
| WONDERFUL! | Customer Rating: | Though I am not a particular fan of Shakespearian work, I instantly fell in love wioth Othello. This play is one of the greatest things ever written. Never has a playwright combined love, extreme decpeption, jealousy, anger, and fear in a play like Shakespeare has in Othello.
Even if you are not a fan of Shakespeare, I highlky recommend this play.
If you do not wish to read the play then I would recommend going out and renting or buying the movie "O" with Josh Hartnet, Julia Stiles, and Mikih Phifer. I would rent/but the 2 disc version because the second disc includes the original silent version of "Othello" from the 1920s. |
|