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The Tears Of Sovereignty Perspectives Of Power In Renaissance DramaThe Tears Of Sovereignty Perspectives Of Power In Renaissance Drama

The Tears Of Sovereignty Perspectives Of Power In Renaissance Drama

Philip Lorenz

About this book

A comparative study of the representation of sovereignty in paradigmatic plays of early modernity, The Tears of Sovereignty argues that the great playwrights of the period{u2014}William Shakespeare, Lope de Vega, and Calderón de la Barca{u2014}reconstitute the metaphors through which contemporary theorists continue to conceive the problems of sovereignty. The book focuses in particular on the ways the logics of these metaphors inform sovereignty{u2019}s conceptualization as a 2body of power.3 Each chapter is organized around a key tropological operation performed on that 2body,3 from the analogical relations invoked in Richard II, through the metaphorical transfers staged in Measure for Measure to the autoimmune resistances they produce in Lope{u2019}s Fuenteovejuna, and, finally, the allegorical returns of Calderón{u2019}s Life Is a Dream and Shakespeare{u2019}s TheWinter{u2019}s Tale. The 2tears3 of sovereignty are the exegetical tropes produced and performed on the English stages and Spanish corrales of the seventeenth century through which we continue to view sovereignty today.

Details

OL Work ID
OL17578156W

Subjects

English drama (collections), early modern and elizabethan, 1500-1600English drama, history and criticismSpanish drama, history and criticismKings and rulers in literatureSpanish dramaSovereignty in literaturePower (Philosophy) in literatureEnglish dramaHistory and criticism

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