An edition of Engaging with Shakespeare (1994)

Engaging with Shakespeare

responses of George Eliot and other women novelists

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 24, 2024 | History
An edition of Engaging with Shakespeare (1994)

Engaging with Shakespeare

responses of George Eliot and other women novelists

  • 1 Want to read

In Engaging with Shakespeare, Marianne Novy considers the contributions of women novelists in shaping and responding to Shakespeare's cultural presence. Paying particular attention to issues related to gender or to ideologies of gender - especially the ways in which women writers use Shakespeare's plots of marriage and romantic love, his female characters, and the gender-crossing aspects of his male characters and his image - Novy traces a history of women trying to create a Shakespeare of their own.

Charting an alternative course to the one emphasized by Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar in The Madwoman in the Attic, which portrays the male-authored canon as alienating to women, Novy contends that the responses of women writers to Shakespeare often involve an appropriative creativity, a tradition of reading and rewriting male-authored texts to find their own concerns.

After showing that women's fictional experiments as early as the eighteenth century and Jane Austen enter into dialogue with Shakespeare, Novy considers the engagements of women novelists with Shakespeare over the more than 250 years up to the 1990s. She discusses some women novelists' identification with his female characters, and the more surprising occasional identification with his status as an outsider, as well as the many different novelistic transformations of his plots.

She also shows that for many women novelists, beginning with Charlotte Bronte and George Eliot, the wide-ranging sympathy associated with Shakespeare could be a congenial ideal - up to a point. Novy demonstrates how Eliot's novels Felix Holt, Middlemarch, and Daniel Deronda, especially, take on new meanings when seen as in dialogue with Shakespeare. She explores the changes between Eliot's and those of early twentieth-century modernists - Willa Cather, Virginia Woolf and Iris Murdoch - and then marks the emergence of more explicit feminist protest in the works of such novelists as Margaret Drabble and Margaret Atwood.

Finally, she discusses recent works by Angela Carter, Nadine Gordimer, Gloria Naylor, and Jane Smiley, as well as Drabble, that engage Shakespeare and contemporary cultural hybridity, thereby repositioning Shakespeare as part of a global multiculturalism.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
271

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Engaging with Shakespeare
Engaging with Shakespeare: responses of George Eliot and other women novelists
1994, University of Georgia Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 245-262) and index.

Published in
Athens, Ga

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
823.009/9287
Library of Congress
PR2975 .N68 1994, PR2975.N68 1994

The Physical Object

Pagination
xii, 271 p. ;
Number of pages
271

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1396716M
Internet Archive
engagingwithshak0000novy
ISBN 10
0820315966
LCCN
93004158
OCLC/WorldCat
27976487
Goodreads
3041952

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