Photo de l'auteur

Alan Sinfield (1941–2017)

Auteur de Political Shakespeare: Essays in Cultural Materialism

24+ oeuvres 429 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Alan Sinfield is Professor of English at the University of Sussex.
Crédit image: Courtesy of Serpent's Tail Press

Œuvres de Alan Sinfield

Political Shakespeare: Essays in Cultural Materialism (1985) — Directeur de publication — 115 exemplaires
Cultural Politics - Queer Reading (1994) 42 exemplaires
Macbeth, William Shakespeare (1992) 11 exemplaires
Dramatic monologue (1977) 4 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Hamlet (1603) — Directeur de publication, quelques éditions30,982 exemplaires
Shakespeare and the interpretive tradition (1999) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Membres

Critiques

As an analysis of literature and culture in post-war Britain, this is indeed fabulous. Sinfield occasionally makes idiotic, hyperbolic comments, but in general his writing is clear and the ways he connects literary works to social change is tremendously convincing. The book's structure is great: not historical in the sense that each chapter recounts a specific period, but also not thematic in the sense that it jumps around from year to year; somehow he manages to have an historical flow combined with thematically tight chapters. The obvious thing to say is that his solution is a bizarre and, from a 2010's perspective, frightening one: that we should all bunker down in our individual subcultures and weather the storm of free market capitalism. Maybe that looked possible in the 80's; at a stretch maybe at moments in the nineties; it's pretty clear now that an appeal to subcultures is about as realistic as appeals to culture in the face of social and political events always is. Given that Sinfield's argument is sympathetic, but ultimately opposed, to New Left style cultural works, the book ends up in a mighty uncomfortable position: culture that is made with universal aspirations is complicit with capitalism; culture that is made for a small group of like-minded (and, at the most absurd, like-coloured, gendered and sexualized) people is a haven from it. I'll take the perhaps hopeless universalist position every time. But if there's anyone I'd like to argue with about this, it's Mr Sinfield.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
stillatim | Dec 29, 2013 |
The new wave of cultural materialists in Britain and new historicists in the United States here join forces to depose the sacred icon of the "eternal bard" and argue for a Shakespeare who meditates and exploits political, cultural and ideological forces. Ten years on, this second edition presents additional essays by Jonathan Dollimore and Alan Sinfield.
 
Signalé
RKC-Drama | Mar 24, 2011 |

Listes

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
24
Aussi par
2
Membres
429
Popularité
#56,934
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
3
ISBN
82

Tableaux et graphiques