• Shakespeare's anti-politics : sovereign power and the life of the flesh
  • Record Type: Electronic resources : monographic
    Title Information: sovereign power and the life of the flesh
    Author: GilDaniel Juan.,
    Place of Publication: [Basingstoke]
    Published: Palgrave Macmillan;
    Year of Publication: 2013
    Description: 1 online resource
    Series: Palgrave Shakespeare studies
    Subject: Politics in literature. -
    Subject: DRAMA / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh -
    Personal Subject: Shakespeare, William - Political and social views. -
    Online resource: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137275011
    Notes: Description based on online resource; title from title details screen (Palgrave Connect, viewed Aug. 27, 2013).
    Summary: Rejecting arguments that Shakespeare is either an absolutist or a partisan of civic republican values, this book argues that Shakespeare is essentially anti-political, dissecting the nature of the nation-state and charting a surprising form of resistance to it. For Shakespeare, the nation-state is essentially and inescapably a vehicle of sovereign power, seizing the bodily lives of its subjects to impose regulated subjectivities, roles and identities, including a collective national identity. Shakespeare does not imagine directly opposing sovereign power; rather, he imagines using sovereign power against itself to engineer new forms of selfhood and relationality that escape the orbit of the nation-state. It is the new experiences of selfhood and relationality that flourish in the shadows of sovereign power that Gil terms 'the life of the flesh,' and he argues that one place where the life of the flesh appears especially prominently is in a non-intimate experience of sexuality.
    ISBN: 9781137275011electronic bk.
    ISBN: 1137275014electronic bk.
    Content Note: 1. The Historical Conditions of Possibility of the Life of the Flesh: Absolutism, Civic Republicanism and 'Bare Life' in "Julius Caesar" 2. The Life of the Condemned: The Autonomous Legal System and the Community of the Flesh in "Measure for Measure" 3. Unsettling the Civic Republican Order: The Face of Sovereign Power and the Fate of the Citizen in "Othello" 4. Life Outside the Law: Torture and the Flesh in "King Lear" Epilogue: The Afterlife of the Life of the Flesh.
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