Spirit, Soul, and City

Shakespeare's 'Coriolanus'

By (author) Jan H. Blits

Paperback - £40.00

Publication date:

27 July 2006

Length of book:

254 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

226x180mm
7x9"

ISBN-13: 9780739115428

Spirit, Soul, and City offers a new reading of Coriolanus, Shakespeare's most political play and the last of his great tragedies. Portraying the founding of the Roman republic and the life and soul of its legendary warrior, Coriolanus, the play brings to light not only the hidden working of Rome's mixed regime but the inherent tragic tensions in the soul's spirited tendency to strive to go beyond itself in order to be true to itself. Distinguished scholar Jan H. Blits provides a fresh interpretation of this rich, complex, and often perplexing play, combining meticulous detail and insightful breadth. Proceeding line-by-line through the play, this book reaches its conclusions by closely examining Shakespeare's text—his plot, characters, language, structure, allusions, puzzles, and other devices.
At a time when Shakespeare studies have earned notoriety for thesis-ridden impositions Blits offers a seasonable corrective. His allowing the plot of Coriolanus to determine the course of his commentary gives relief from partisan pleading combined with surer access to Shakespeare's thought as Blits invites us to observe moral and political implications of a dramatic argument in its unfolding Act by Act, scene by scene, line by line.