Home > Shakespearean Criticism > Beginnings and Endings - Bernard Beckerman (essay date 1985)
Beginnings and Endings - Bernard Beckerman (essay date 1985)
Bernard Beckerman (essay date 1985)
SOURCE: “Shakespeare Closing,” in The Kenyon Review, Vol. VII, n.s., No. 3, Summer 1985, pp. 79-95.
[In the following essay, Beckerman surveys the final scenes of Shakespeare's comedies, tragedies, and histories. In his analysis of these, he distinguishes between the resolution (how the narrative is unraveled) and the closing (the particular way the playwright conveys the sense of an ending.) Beckerman emphasizes that with regard to each of the dramatic genres, Shakespeare transformed the principles of accepted dramatic conventions even as he ostensibly observed them.]
By 1970, a remarkable change had come over theater audiences in New York. For the first time in the experience of regular playgoers, audiences became extraordinarily demonstrative. I recall precisely the first time I encountered this new behavior. It was at a performance of the revival of No, No, Nanette with Ruby Keeler. The...
[The entire page is 9320 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Criticism: Beginnings: Overviews
- Criticism: Beginnings: Comedies
- Criticism: Beginnings: Late Plays
- Criticism: Endings: Overviews
- Criticism: Endings: Comedies
- Criticism: Endings: Tragedies
- Criticism: Endings: Hamlet
- Criticism: Endings: King Lear
- Criticism: Endings: Othello
- Criticism: Endings: Romeo And Juliet
- Further Reading
- Copyright
