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Shakespeare, Jonson, and the Claims of the Performative

By James Loxley, Mark Robson

To Be Published February 1st 2013 by Routledge – 176 pages

Series: Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture

Purchasing Options:

  • Hardback: 978-0-415-99327-2: $125.00
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Description

This book will constitute an original intervention into longstanding but insistently relevant debates around the significance of notions of ‘performativity’ to the critical analysis of early modern drama.

In particular, the book aims to:

  • show how the investigation of performativity can enable readings of Shakespeare and Jonson that challenge the dominant methodological frameworks within which those plays have come to be read;

  • demonstrate that the thought of performativity does not come to rest in the simplicity of method or instrumentality, and that it resists its own claim that language and action might be understood as unproblematically instrumental;

  • demonstrate that this self-resistance occurs or takes place as a moment in the process of articulating the claims of the performative, and that this process is itself in an important sense dramatic.

Contents

Introduction: the continuing claims of the performative; Part 1: Performativity, History, Criticism; 1. Words of the future: promises; 2. Recovering the past: libels; Part 2: At the limits of the performative; 3. Being obnoxious: Jonson makes his excuses; 4. Beyond all possible neutrality: declarations of/in dependence; Part 3: The conditions of the performative; 5. Responsibilities: the challenge of seriousness; 6. Alienated majesty: animating the ordinary; Conclusion

Author Bio

James Loxley is a senior lecturer in English Literature at the University of Edinburgh. He is the author of Performativity (Routledge, 2007), Ben Jonson (Routledge, 2002), Royalism and Poetry in the English Civil Wars (Macmillan, 1997), and a number of articles on early modern literature and contemporary issues in the theory of literary criticism.

Mark Robson teaches at the University of Nottingham. He is the author of Stephen Greenblatt (Routledge, 2007) and The Sense of Early Modern Writing: Rhetoric, Poetics, Aesthetics (Manchester University Press, 2006), and is co-author of Language in Theory (Routledge, 2005). He edited Jacques Rancière: Aesthetics, Politics, Philosophy (Edinburgh University Press/Paragraph, 2005), and co-edited The Limits of Death: Between Philosophy and Psychoanalysis (Manchester University Press, 2000). He has published many articles in journals and essay collections, including several pieces on Shakespeare.

Name: Shakespeare, Jonson, and the Claims of the Performative (Hardback)Routledge 
Description: By James Loxley, Mark Robson. This book will constitute an original intervention into longstanding but insistently relevant debates around the significance of notions of ‘performativity’ to the critical analysis of early modern drama. In particular, the book aims...
Categories: Theatre & Performance Studies, Early Modern/Renaissance Literature, Shakespeare