Home > Shakespearean Criticism > Julius Caesar (Vol. 85) - Marvin Spevack (essay date 2003)
Julius Caesar (Vol. 85) - Marvin Spevack (essay date 2003)
Marvin Spevack (essay date 2003)
SOURCE: Spevack, Marvin, ed. Introduction to Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, 2nd ed., pp. 1-45. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
[In the following excerpt, Spevack surveys the dramatic structure, themes, and characters of Julius Caesar.]
THE FRAME
Broadly seen, Shakespeare's concern with the private sphere is most evident in his comedies and poetry, with the public sphere in the history plays. Had Shakespeare not resumed writing tragedies with Julius Caesar, the two tragedies which preceded it, Titus Andronicus and Romeo and Juliet, might mutatis mutandis be assigned to the histories and comedies respectively. But the question of genre need not be stretched or stressed. What is apparent from the Yorkist and Lancastrian tetralogies and King John is Shakespeare's interest in public affairs, in problems of power and rule, in the qualities of the...
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- Introduction
- Criticism: Overviews And General Studies
- Criticism: Character Studies
- Criticism: Production Reviews
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Criticism: Themes
- Joseph S. M. J. Chang (essay date January 1970)
- R. J. Kaufmann and Clifford J. Ronan (essay date spring 1970)
- A. W. Bellringer (essay date spring 1970)
- Myron Taylor (essay date summer 1973)
- Marvin L. Vawter (essay date July 1973)
- Richard Wilson (essay date 1993)
- Robin Headlam Wells (essay date 2002)
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