Product Details
Edward II  (New Mermaids)

Edward II (New Mermaids)
By Christopher Marlowe, Martin Wiggins, Robert Lindsay

List Price: £6.99
Price: £5.57 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1 to 2 days
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

41 new or used available from £1.85

Average customer review:

Product Description

Marlowe's play retains its power to shock even today, and this edition gives full value to its three overriding themes of sexual favouritism, political confrontation and sheer cruelty. Critics in the last twenty years, who have focused on the overtly sexual relationship between Edward and his favourite Gaveston, have hailed it as a 'gay classic'; earlier interpretations concentrated rather on the deposition by his subjects of a weak king, reading it in tandem with Shakespeare's Richard II. The introduction shows how the play works to give the audience an equal emotional commitment to opposing points of view and concludes that this is what makes Edward II such an uncomfortable and challenging play.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #37434 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-03-31
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 176 pages

Customer Reviews

Moving and powerful5
Marlowe's play about the gay king of England seems incredibly modern in its sympathetic representation of a homosexual man. Sure, Edward may get 'punished' for his crime (in the most hideous way imaginable), but Marlowe's sympathies are clearly with Edward, whose love scenes with Gaveston are poetic and touching. By contrast, Edward's overthrower, Mortimer is a cold-blooded villain, and he too gets his comeuppance. Compare this play with the supposedly modern film 'Braveheart', which vilifies Edward II's homosexuality, and you can see that Marlowe is ahead of his time even now.

Marlowe at his best4
This is a powerful play whereby Marlowe examines the humiliations that the King has to suffer due to his homosexuality. The reader begins to understand the great difficulty involved in balancing personal and political concerns, especially in centuries past. It sweeps the reader away into history, politics, corruption and controversy which exemplifies Marlowe at his best. I would recommend this play to anyone who has an interest in Renaissance culture or has enjoyed the works of Webster and Middleton & Rowley.