Front cover image for Mind in character : Shakespeare's speaker in the sonnets

Mind in character : Shakespeare's speaker in the sonnets

"This book is about poetry rather than theory. Shakespeare's poetry, I find, remains more relevant and more rewarding than any theory, however elaborate, as to who, if anyone, should read a text and, if so, how they should do it. In other words, I do not intend another prolegomena for future studies of the reader in the text and/ or the text in the reader. I simply have written what I think the sonnets are about, what they say and how they say it. I do not attempt to speak for "the reader," as I know little about him or her, but only for myself. What interests me especially is the behavior of Shakespeare's sonnet-speaker, the coherent psychological entity projected by the speaking voice in these poems. I do not identify that speaker with the historical William Shakespeare, knowing scarcely more about him than about "the reader."--Preface
Print Book, English, 1987
University of Missouri Press, Columbia, 1987
Criticism, interpretation, etc
xiii, 195 pages ; 23 cm
9780826206473, 0826206476
15283242
Ironies of awareness: The cosmic dimension ; The dry mock ; Dramatic irony
Soliloquy sonnets: Self-discovery ; Introspection ; Final statements
Dialogue Sonnets: Four modes of address ; Four types of dialogue ; Sonnet 18 as dialogue
Awareness lost: Soliloquies ; Initial dialogues ; Later dialogues: the final breakdown
Includes indexes