David Bevington
Born
in New York City, New York, The United States
May 13, 1931
Died
August 02, 2019
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English Renaissance Drama: A Norton Anthology
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published
2002
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3 editions
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Medieval Drama
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published
1975
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7 editions
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Shakespeare: Script, Stage, Screen
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published
2005
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Murder Most Foul: Hamlet Through the Ages
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published
2011
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5 editions
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Shakespeare's Ideas
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published
2008
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13 editions
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Shakespeare: The Seven Ages of Human Experience
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published
2005
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5 editions
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Twentieth Century Interpretations of Hamlet: A Collection of Critical Essays
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published
1968
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4 editions
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Shakespeare's Tragedies (Bevington Shakespeare Series)
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published
2006
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This Wide and Universal Theater: Shakespeare in Performance, Then and Now
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published
2007
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5 editions
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How to Read a Shakespeare Play
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published
2006
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4 editions
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“Julius Caesar is an ambivalent study of civil conflict. As in Richard II, the play is structured around two protagonists rather than one. Cesar and Brutus are more alike one another than either would care to admit. This antithetical balance reflects a dual tradition: the medieval view of Dante and Chaucer condemning Brutus and Cassius as conspirators, and the Renaissance view of Sir Philip Sidney and Ben Johnson condemning Caesar as tyrant. Those opposing views still live on in various 20th-century productions which seek to enlist them play on the side of conservatism or liberalism.”
― The Complete Works of Shakespeare
― The Complete Works of Shakespeare
“According to widely accepted mythology Elizabethans considered themselves descended from the Romans through another Brutus, the great-grandson of Aeneas.”
― The Complete Works of Shakespeare
― The Complete Works of Shakespeare
“Rome's choice during her civil wars lay between a senatorial Republican form of government and a strong single rul although the monarchial English might incline to be suspicious of republicanism, they had no experience to compare it with. . . .On the other hand, Roman one-man rule as it flourished under Octavia Cesar lacked the English sanctions of divine right and monarchical primogeniture.”
― The Complete Works of Shakespeare
― The Complete Works of Shakespeare
Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
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The Reading For P...:
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THE WORDSMITHS' JOURNAL - RFP's DIARY of Bookish Events 2019
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1933 | 211 | Jan 01, 2020 09:27AM | |
| Catching up on Cl...: The Winter's Tale - No Spoilers | 14 | 63 | Nov 27, 2020 03:19PM | |
| Catching up on Cl...: Shakespeare's History Plays | 54 | 96 | Jan 09, 2021 07:25PM | |
| Catching up on Cl...: The Tempest - No Spoiler | 48 | 81 | Sep 05, 2022 01:53AM | |
| The Reading For P...: Book Bargains! What have you spotted? | 349 | 338 | Sep 11, 2022 11:03AM | |
| Catching up on Cl...: The Tempest - Spoilers | 13 | 43 | Sep 27, 2022 09:54AM | |
| Catching up on Cl...: A Midsummer Night's Dream - No Spoilers | 19 | 61 | May 29, 2023 04:42PM | |
| Catching up on Cl...: Matt’s 2023 Shakespeare Challenge | 65 | 235 | Nov 02, 2023 03:00PM | |
| Catching up on Cl...: The Merchant of Venice - NO Spoilers | 43 | 152 | Jan 06, 2025 06:19AM |






