Shakespeare's Language
| Format: | Paperback 336 pages |
|---|
Available to order
Usually despatched in 3-5 days
RRP £9.99
£6.99
You save: £3.00
Delivered FREE
in the UK
Synopsis
The true biography of Shakespeare - and the only one we really need to care about - is in the plays. Sir Frank Kermode, Britain's most distinguished literary critic, has been thinking about them all his life. This book is a distillation of that lifetime's thinking. The great English tragedies were all written in the first decade of the seventeenth century. They are often in language that is difficult to us, and must have been hard even for contemporaries. How and why did Shakespeare's language develop as it did? Kermode argues that the resources of English underwent major change around 1600. The originality of Kermodes' writing, and the intelligence of his discussion, make this book a landmark.
Book details
Published
05/04/2001
Publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
ISBN
9780140285925
Publisher and industry reviews
Other books by this author See all titles
The "Figure in the Carpet" and Other Stories
£8.54
RRP: £12.99
You save: £4.45
Aspects of the Novel
£6.99
RRP: £9.99
You save: £3.00
Concerning E.M. Forster: EM Forster and His Contemporaries
£8.54
RRP: £8.99
You save: £0.45
The Way We Live Now
£6.99
RRP: £9.99
You save: £3.00
Customers who bought this title, also bought...
The World of Karl Pilkington
£7.10
RRP: £10.00
You save: £2.90
Call for the Dead
£6.29
RRP: £8.99
You save: £2.70
This book can be found in...
The prices displayed are for website purchases only, and may differ to the prices in Waterstones stores.












