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Henry V is a complex and challenging Shakespearean play that rewards detailed study. While few critics count it among Shakespeare’s greatest works, the play is almost always successful in the theatre. Compared to some of Shakespeare’s more criticallly esteemed works, Henry V is more accessible to students, who find it easier to grasp it as a text inviting lively discussion. In the early 1990s its popularity surged with the release of Kenneth Branagh’s film version (1989), a hit with audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. This work provides an introductory guide to virtually all aspects of the play. The volume begins with a full overview and textual history of the play and its historical and cultural contexts, with special emphasis on how it contributed to the debate on kingship and authority in the late-16th century. The book then concentrates extensively on the play’s dramatic structure, its plots, its pattens of language, and its development of characters. Central to this discussion is the ambiguous presentation of Henry V, a public figure who may be interpreted as both an heroic king and a Machiavellian leader. The next chapter examines the play’s significant themes: order and chaos, war, and kingship. The volume then evaluates different crtical approaches to the play, so that the reader may understand how critics have responded to it over time. The final chapter carefully analyzes several theatrical, film and video productions of Henry V. A closing biliographical essay outlines the most important critical works on this enduring and provocative drama.
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Henry V is a complex and challenging Shakespearean play that rewards detailed study. While few critics count it among Shakespeare’s greatest works, the play is almost always successful in the theatre. Compared to some of Shakespeare’s more criticallly esteemed works, Henry V is more accessible to students, who find it easier to grasp it as a text inviting lively discussion. In the early 1990s its popularity surged with the release of Kenneth Branagh’s film version (1989), a hit with audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. This work provides an introductory guide to virtually all aspects of the play. The volume begins with a full overview and textual history of the play and its historical and cultural contexts, with special emphasis on how it contributed to the debate on kingship and authority in the late-16th century. The book then concentrates extensively on the play’s dramatic structure, its plots, its pattens of language, and its development of characters. Central to this discussion is the ambiguous presentation of Henry V, a public figure who may be interpreted as both an heroic king and a Machiavellian leader. The next chapter examines the play’s significant themes: order and chaos, war, and kingship. The volume then evaluates different crtical approaches to the play, so that the reader may understand how critics have responded to it over time. The final chapter carefully analyzes several theatrical, film and video productions of Henry V. A closing biliographical essay outlines the most important critical works on this enduring and provocative drama.