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Lear

Lear

The Great Image of Authority

by Harold Bloom
Hardback
Publication Date: 01/06/2018

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Harold Bloom, regarded by some as the greatest Shakespeare scholar of our time, presents an intimate, wise, deeply compelling portrait of King Lear - the third in his series of five short books about the great playwright's most significant personalities, hailed as Bloom's "last love letter to the shaping spirit of his imagination" on the front page of The New York Times Book Review.

King Lear is perhaps the most poignant character in literature. The aged, abused monarch - a man in his eighties, like Harold Bloom himself - is at once the consummate figure of authority and the classic example of the fall from majesty. He is widely agreed to be William Shakespeare's most moving, tragic hero.

Award-winning writer and beloved professor Harold Bloom writes about Lear with wisdom, joy, exuberance, and compassion. He also explores his own personal relationship to the character: Just as we encounter one Emma Bovary or Hamlet when we are seventeen and another when we are forty, Bloom writes about his shifting understanding - over the course of his own lifetime - of Lear, so that this book also explores an extraordinarily moving argument for literature as a path to and a measure of our humanity.

Bloom is mesmerizing in the classroom, wrestling with the often tragic choices Shakespeare's characters make. He delivers that kind of exhilarating intimacy, pathos, and clarity in Lear.

ISBN:
9781501164194
9781501164194
Category:
Literary studies: plays & playwrights
Format:
Hardback
Publication Date:
01-06-2018
Language:
English
Publisher:
Scribner
Country of origin:
United States
Pages:
176
Dimensions (mm):
213x140x15.24mm
Weight:
0.32kg
Harold Bloom

Harold Bloom was the Sterling Professor of Humanities at Yale University. He had written more than sixty books, including Cleopatra: I Am Fire and Air, Falstaff: Give Me Life, The Western Canon, Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human, and How to Read and Why.

He was a MacArthur Prize fellow, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the recipient of many awards, including the Academy’s Gold Medal for Criticism. He lived in New Haven, Connecticut, until his death in October 2019.

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