Acknowledgements General Editor's Preface 1. The Original Text 2. Shakespeare's Codes 3 A Shakespearean Grammar Notes Index
Philip Davis is Professor of English Literature at the University of Liverpool. His books include Sudden Shakespeare and The Victorians (Oxford English Literary History).
"Shakespeare Thinking is a powerful plea for criticism to engage
afresh with Shakespeare's language as the ‘quick forge' of a vision
that defies paraphrase or synopsis. An urgent, absorbing polemic
and a compelling quest to crack the plays' unique poetic code." -
Professor Kiernan Ryan, Royal Holloway, University of London,
UK
*Professor Kiernan Ryan*
-Mention. Daily Telegraph/ April 8, 2007
*Daily Telegraph*
"In Davis's hands these ideas prove utterly exhilarating... This
book is essential reading." - Peter G. Platt, Studies in English
Literature, Spring 2008
*Peter G. Platt*
"Philip Davis's Shakespeare Thinking is...a study more indebted to
literary and scientific criticism that to actual Shakespeare
production...Davis is perfectly capable of composing a coherent
sentence; more often his prose is as clotted as cottage
cheese...Davis is an intelligent man, but I would avoid his
classroom at the University of Liverpool if I were you." - Robert
Brustein, American Theatre, September 2008
*Robert Brustein*
Mention -Bibliotheque d'Humanisme et Renaissance, Tome LXX-2008
"Davis offers a series of intricately realized and highly
satisfying close readings of Shakespearean language and
character....offers one of the more productive of the many recent
encounters between literary criticism and neuroscience. The
emphasis on the dynamic, on connections and the ‘movement between'
static locations is a valuable antidote to the reductive
localization that sometimes makes vulgar versions of neuroscience
resemble a new phrenology...good grounds for optimism about the new
dialogue between literary criticism and neuroscience because the
are interested in genuine dialogue between the two cultures...there
are old things which Shakespeare can teach to brain scientists." A
Journal of Neurology, 2009
*Jonathan Bate*
"The ambitious project of the Shakespeare NOW series is to bridge
the gap between ‘scholarly thinking and a public audience' and
‘public audience and scholarly thinking'. Scholars are encouraged
to write in a way accessible to a general readership and readers to
rise to the challenge and not be afraid of new ideas and the
adventure they offer. There are other bridges the series is
ambitious to cross: ‘formal, political or theoretical boundaries' -
history and philosophy, theory, and performance." English Vol. 58,
2009
"[Shakespeare Now! is] an innovative new series... Series editors
Simon Palfry and Ewan Fernie have rejected the notion of business
as usual in order to pursue a distinctive strategy that aims to put
"cutting-edge scholarship" in front of a broad audience.
Shakespeare Now! with its insistent appeal to the contemporary-
this is fresh Shakespeare for readers turned off by the prospect of
dry-as-dust scholarship-aims to reach a general audience...
Combining brain science with Shakespeare studies, Davis [in
the book Shakespeare Thinking] has provided a lively and
interesting account of what he elsewhere terms "the Shakespeared
brain."... [this book] announces the emergence of a significant
trend that will surely attract increasing attention in the years
ahead... Shakespeare Thinking is an anxious plea for the continuing
relevance of humanism"
*Shakespeare Quarterly*
"Where is Shakespeare now? This question is the brief for a new
series of short books from Continuum, an enterprising publisher
trying to break down the border between academic literary criticism
and books for the thoughtful general reader...Philip Davis's
Shakespeare Thinking proposes that Shakespeare's poetry functions
like a 'Renaissance brain scanner': his line-endings are a 'form of
slow-motion eye-map for actors' voices that offer deep insight into
the working of the human brain.' This may sound fanciful, but Davis
is such a gifted close reader of the ebb and flow of Shakespearean
language that he persuades us he is really on to something." -
Jonathan Bate, The Sunday Telegraph
*Sunday Telegraph*
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