2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6757.2011.01098.x
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Measure for Measureand the Problem of Popularity

Abstract: This essay uses King James I's rejection of Elizabethan practices of “popularity” during his accession progresses as an entry point into how Measure for Measure explores tensions between absolutism and a public sphere. Like James, Duke Vincentio dislikes performing affability with his subjects; Shakespeare expands the Duke's reticence into a larger rejection of the public and its networks of news, analysis, and gossip. The Duke sees this public, whose noise he seeks to control, as the chief impediment to his a… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…However, his writings suggest that he is a social reformer. Doty (2012) insists that Shakespeare, in his plays, "taught his audiences how to analyze political situations and statecraft more broadly" (34). Shakespeare was ahead of his time by pointing out the faults of all class members in his community, including the fact that the aristocrats are not divinely inspired, or have divine rights, nor do they always have the best interests of the state in mind.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, his writings suggest that he is a social reformer. Doty (2012) insists that Shakespeare, in his plays, "taught his audiences how to analyze political situations and statecraft more broadly" (34). Shakespeare was ahead of his time by pointing out the faults of all class members in his community, including the fact that the aristocrats are not divinely inspired, or have divine rights, nor do they always have the best interests of the state in mind.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the broad aims of the ‘Making Publics’ project, it is ironic that their analyses of Renaissance drama have been so narrow in focus. Predictably, given his cultural import, Shakespeare has dominated research on publics: Hamlet (1600) is a great source of interest to Yachnin (‘Social’, ‘Performing’), and Mullaney and Welch also focus on the play, while Shankar Raman examines The Merchant of Venice (1596), and Doty considers several Shakespeare plays (‘ Richard II ’; ‘ Measure for Measure ’; ‘Popular Politics’). Unlike the others, Yachnin also gestures towards the wider corpus of Renaissance drama, incorporating references to other dramatists in his essays and producing one piece focusing on how Middleton's drama ‘fashioned a public space were one did not exist before’ (‘Playing’ 32), but future work should examine the variety of the Renaissance stage in greater detail.…”
Section: Playing Privacymentioning
confidence: 99%