Shakespeare's Sonnets
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the 154 sonnets collected and printed in 1609 of which some are famous, many are glorious, most are inspiring and several are unsettling.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the collection of poems published in 1609 by Thomas Thorpe: Shakespeare鈥檚 Sonnets, 鈥渘ever before imprinted鈥. Yet, while some of Shakespeare's other poems and many of his plays were often reprinted in his lifetime, the Sonnets were not a publishing success. They had to make their own way, outside the main canon of Shakespeare鈥檚 work: wonderful, troubling, patchy, inspiring and baffling, and they have appealed in different ways to different times. Most are addressed to a man, something often overlooked and occasionally concealed; one early and notorious edition even changed some of the pronouns.
With:
Hannah Crawforth
Senior Lecturer in Early Modern Literature at King鈥檚 College London
Don Paterson
Poet and Professor of Poetry at the University of St Andrews
And
Emma Smith
Professor of Shakespeare Studies at Hertford College, Oxford
Producer: Simon Tillotson
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LINKS AND FURTHER READING
READING LIST
Stephen Booth, Shakespeare's Sonnets (first published 1978; Yale University Press, 2000)
Hannah Crawforth and Elizabeth Scott-Baumann (eds.), On Shakespeare鈥檚 Sonnets: A Poets鈥 Celebration (Arden, 2016)
Hannah Crawforth, Elizabeth Scott-Baumann and Clare Whitehead (eds.), Shakespeare鈥檚 Sonnets: The State of Play (Arden, 2018)
Katherine Duncan-Jones, Shakespeare's Sonnets (The Arden Shakespeare, 1997)
Patricia Fumerton, 鈥樷漇ecret鈥 Arts: Elizabethan Miniatures and Sonnets鈥 (Representations 15, summer 1986, University of California Press)
Kim Hall, Things of Darkness: Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England (Cornell University Press, 1995), especially chapter 2, 鈥楩air Texts/Dark Ladies: Renaissance Lyric and the Poetics of Color鈥
John Kerrigan, The Sonnets and A Lover's Complaint (Penguin Classics, 1986)
Jane Kingsley-Smith, The Afterlife of Shakespeare鈥檚 Sonnets (Cambridge University Press, 2019)
Don Paterson, Reading Shakespeare鈥檚 Sonnets (Faber, 2010)
Oscar Wilde (ed. John Sloan), The Complete Short Stories (Oxford World鈥檚 Classics), especially 鈥楾he Portrait of Master W.H.鈥
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