Troilus and Cressida (New Cambridge Shakespeare) (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Troilus and Cressida, long considered one of Shakespeare’s most problematic plays, is both difficult and fascinating. Largely neglected during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries it has recently proved popular and rewarding on the stage as well as in the study. This edition questions certain received ideas about the play’s text, especially the relationship between quarto and folio and offers several new readings of old problems. Dawson’s textual choices are often surprising but at the same time carefully grounded. He views the play from a performance perspective - both in the commentary as well as in the detailed section on stage history in the introduction. The introduction also covers the cultural context in which the play was written, probes the controversy about its early performance and provides extensive analysis of character, language, genre and contemporary significance.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #238559 in Books
- Published on: 2003-09-11
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 280 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
One of Shakespeare's most notoriously difficult and cynical plays, labelled a "Problem Comedy", Troilus and Cressida has perplexed critics and theatre directors, and after Shakespeare's lifetime it was not performed again until 1907. In many ways the play's difficulty is a surprise; the story of Troilus and Cressida was a popular theme, drawn from Homer's Iliad and Chaucer's own Troilus and Criseyde, as was its classical setting, the Greek siege of Troy, led by Agamemnon, Achilles, Ajax, Diomedes and Ulysses.
Within the walls of Troy, Prince Troilus falls madly in love with Cressida, daughter of the deserter Calchas. His love is intense and frenetic--"I am giddy, expectation whirls round me," but turns to bitter disillusion when Cressida defects to the Greek camp and flirts with Diomedes. As the war and conflict over the abduction of Helen whirls around the doomed romance, the play delights in its complex syntax and cynical images of waste, decay, corruption and mutability, summed up in Ulysses' comment that, "Love, friendship, charity, are subjects all / To envious and calumniating time." The play's cynical open-ended quality has frustrated many readers, but gives the play a remarkably modern, contemporary sensibility. --Jerry Brotton
Review
‘I commend this new edition particularly for the introductory sections.’ Shakespeare at the Centre Magazine
‘… fine new edition …Anthony B. Dawson's readable and reliable text, together with his excellent explanatory footnotes and his superb discussion of theatrical adaptations of the play, will make this edition a valuable resource for scholars as well as an attractive text for classroom use.’ Shakespeare Quarterly
About the Author
Kenneth Muir is Emeritus Professor and Honorary Senior Fellow at the University of Liverpool.
Customer Reviews
A light read it is not. Great literature?...Oh yes!
Troilus and Cressida, is not well-known as one of Shakespeare's great plays; it has for the most part largely been ignored by the literary world, due to its length, its philosophical under belly and complex story line. I would not recommend it, if you're searching for a light 'bed-time' read, full of typical Shakespearean humour and lovable rogues. Troilus is the work of a mature and experimenting Shakespeare, and thus it has, for the most part been neglected by critics, yet, because it is so unique it should not be ignored. It is an extremely satisfying read, giving a brilliant insight into the darker side of Shakespeare's fascinating mind.
Troilus and Cressida is undoubtedly one of Shakespeare's most ambiguous, puzzling, and therefore most disconcerting plays. The complex and unsettling nature of the play is deliberate, and throughout, Shakespeare presents to us one universal society that we would rather not see. The subversion of the Trojan War which acts as a canvas of the play, is one such ploy to provoke us into thinking about the corruption and hypocrisy of Shakespeare's 16th century society. The great Greek storyteller Homer, first told the tale of the Trojan War in the Iliad and the Odyssey, depicting the warriors, both Greek and Trojans; Aeneas, Achilles, Hector, Ajax, Menelaus, Diomedes and Ulysses - as great heroes worthy of imitation. Shakespeare appears to depict them as quite human, vulgar, pompous and stupid. Shakespeare does not re-tell the story of this epic war and legendary struggle; his play apparently seems to conjure up a bitter and deflating account of the war. Troilus and Crssisda presents us a society driven by the want of immediate consumption and disloyalty both in terms of love and allegiance. However, it is up to us to decide whether any one character is able to rise above the foolish greed that surrounds them.
This Arden edition provides its' readers with a detailed yet very readable collection of notes, conveniently running along side the play. It also provides an extremely well written, yet not overwhelmingly profound group of introductory essays (perfect for the easygoing student). Troilus and Cressida may not officially be regarded as a 'great work' of Shakespeare, but it is thoroughly engaging despite its intricate plot, in my humble view it is most certainly - 'great' - and I would definitely recommend it to all. ENJOY!
A Thoroughly Recommendable Edition of a Dramatic Shakespeare's Play
This is the second Shakespeare's play to have kept me wanting to find out what actually happens. Arguably this may have resulted from my having read Chaucer's "Troilus", which story cannot be outdone in its emotionless pursuit of intellectual ends, but this "Troilus" of itself is still truly laudable as an instance of Shakespeare's drama having some dramatic quality besides great verse speeches to admire. Since Shakespeare is overstudied I am not taking the trouble to review the play itself. Briefly, for the interested general reader, the play as published in the quarto and the Folio purports to be a love story in time of war. What it actually is is rather a war story over the course of a love affair. Troilus and Cressida are not another Romeo and Juliet; it is love as a concept itself that is at the bar here.
Uniquely, Arden Third Series has chosen the Folio text as a copytext for this edition. The editor's argument is thus. Although the play is one of those Shakespeare's plays that seem to have existed in more than one version, the differences between the quarto and the Folio versions of "Troilus" are practically only in word choices. As one's reading is very rarely obviously preferable to the other's, the Foilo text which might plausibly represent a later authorial revision than the earlier quarto text was chosen. Throughout the two texts have been rigorously checked against each other and various editions consulted. All the differences are discussed in the commentary, in which manner, argues the editor, the two versions can be better compared because they do not differ in the way that reading through them separately would be disparate experiences. In the great Arden tradition, significant variances between the early editions are footnoted, as well as the orginal printed text where there has been in the editor's view semantically impinging modernization and editorial emendation, even though in the case of "Troilus" this commitment renders the textual notes, in the editor's words, "burdensomely numerous".
The Arden edition continues to endeavour to place all the notes alongside the text. The luxuriant superplenitude of Shakespeare's overstudies however is compelling the third series to begin assigning "longer notes" to the back. I have always considered side-by-side notes and text as the Arden Shakespeare's greatest virtue and have found myself indeed fairly willing to forgo scholarly guidance when it requires turning to the back. Nevertheless this edition must still surely be as good as the best edition can be. The printing is again attractive, especially in this buckram hardback edition which is a pleasure to hold and evidently more able to withstand repeated handling - if only the demanded price is not quite so exorbitant! The ever-expanding introduction is devoted more or less exclusively to critical and historical readings of the play whilst Shakespeare's sources for this story and the two versions of the text are discussed at the end. Recommended for the cultured general readers and specialists alike.
previous review is for the arden edition, not this cambridge edition!
All these study companions provide is condensed knowledge and opinion, preventing the student for studying with an open mind. Try reading the play without notes to get your own opinion before reading the 'experts' opinions. There is a wordsworth edition of this play with no notes available muuch cheaper than these study companions!




