Product Details
Coriolanus (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)

Coriolanus (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)
By William Shakespeare

List Price: £8.99
Price: £8.09 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

41 new or used available from £4.82

Average customer review:

Product Description

This generously annotated edition of Coriolanus offers a thorough reconsideration of Shakespeare’s remarkable, and probably his last, tragedy. A substantial introduction situates the play within its contemporary social and political contexts - death, riots, the struggle over authority between James 1 and his first parliament, the travails of Essex and Ralegh - and pays particular attention to Shakespeare’s shaping of his primary source in Plutarch’s Lives. It presents a fresh account of how the protagonist’s personal tragedy evolves within Shakespeare’s most searching exploration of the political life of a community. The edition is alert throughout to the play’s theatrical potential, while the stage history also attends to the politics of performance from the 1680s to the 1990s, including European productions following the Second World War.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #154723 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-03-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 315 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
After the exotic eroticism of Antony and Cleopatra, Shakespeare returned to Rome for one of his final tragedies, and the change could not have been more dramatic. Coriolanus is one of Shakespeare's harshest and most challenging studies of power, politics and masculinity, based around the life of Caius Marcius.

Based on the Roman chronicles of Plutarch's Lives and Livy's History of Rome, the play is set in the early years of the Roman Republic. Its famous opening scene, particularly admired by Bertolt Brecht, portrays its citizens as starving and rebellious, and horrified by the arrogant and dismissive attitude of Caius Marcius, one of Rome's most valiant but also political naive soldiers. Spurred on by his ambitious mother Volumnia, Caius takes the city of Corioles, is renamed Coriolanus in honour of his victory, and is encouraged to run for senate. However, his contempt for the citizens, who he calls "scabs" and "musty superfluity" ultimately leads to his exile and destructive alliance with his deadly foe, Aufidius. Despite its relative unpopularity, Coriolanus is a fascinating study of both public and personal life. Its language is dense and complex, as its representation of the tensions built into the fabric of Roman political life. Yet it also contains extraordinarily intimate scenes between Coriolanus and both his mother, who ultimately proves "most mortal" to her own son, and his enemy Aufidius, whose "rapt heart" is happier to see Coriolanus than his own wife. One of Shakespeare's darker and more disturbing plays. --Jerry Brotton

About the Author
Brian Parker is Professor of English, Trinity College, University of Toronto.


Customer Reviews

Shakespeare's Greatest5
Shakespeare's last and greatest tragedy, *Coriolanus* dramatizes the conflict between pride and envy--those two antagonists which were the favorite characters of ancient myth.

Coriolanus is a man of Virtue, when virtue meant 'manliness' not 'modest chastity.' Above all, he had the virtue of pursuing virtue, which he refused to compromise and which he refused to hide. In contrast, the aristocracy and the mob whom they serve despised Coriolanus precisely because he was good and refused to be otherwise.

*Coriolanus* is Shakespeare at the height of his powers, and the real tragedy is that this work is not better known.