Home » Catalog » Shakespeare's Watch

NEW

Shakespeare's Watch
A Guide to Time and Location in the Plays
Buzz Podewell

List Price: $250.00
ISBN: 0-8108-6391-X
ISBN-13: 978-0-8108-6391-0
Pub Date: Jul 2009
690 pages
Binding: Cloth
Availability: In Stock
 
European customers click here
book cover image
Book Flyer

SUBJECTS
Theater & Dance » Theater
Literature » Drama
Area Studies » European Studies
Literature » English Literature

AWARD(S)
Silver Prize Winner of Foreword's 2009 Book of the Year Award in Reference

REVIEWS
"Other features that make Shakespeare's Watch a pragmatic guide are helpful user notes, an easy-to-handle two-volume arrangment, and maps embedded in the discussions of the plays, some of which were drawn by Podewell....Engagingly written and well researched, academic libraries serving active programs in literature and theater will benefit most from Shakespeare's Watch." —Spring 2010, Reference and User Services Quarterly

DESCRIPTION
William Shakespeare has gotten a bum rap from scholars on his use of time and location in his plays. Almost from the first, commentators determined that the Bard was indifferent to such mundane matters. With near glee, early critics pointed at apparent blunders like clocks appearing in Julius Caesar or the two gentlemen of Verona sailing to landlocked Milan. Yet, as any thespian knows, considerations of place and time are primary building blocks of their art.

In Shakespeare's Watch: A Guide to Time and Location in the Plays, Buzz Podewell provides the location and designates the time of each scene in the playwright's comedies, tragedies, and histories. Working scene-by-scene, Podewell provides a brief synopsis of the action to first situate the story. A discussion of the location of each scene and its significance to the action follows, along with a designation of the time of the action (i.e. the play's time scheme) and the time-intervals between scenes. Additionally, both real and conjectural maps of the plays are included to give a sense of the geographical scope of each play. When relevant, maps of the actual historical battles referred to in the texts are also provided. Actors, designers, directors, scholars, and students will all find value in this unique and valuable resource.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Buzz Podewell is professor of directing, theatre history, and Shakespeare at Tulane University.

Email to a friend

 
 
 
Back to Top