Home > Shakespearean Criticism > King Lear (Vol. 83) - Dean Frye (essay date March 1965)
King Lear (Vol. 83) - Dean Frye (essay date March 1965)
Dean Frye (essay date March 1965)
SOURCE: Frye, Dean. “The Context of Lear's Unbuttoning.” ELH 32, no. 1 (March 1965): 17-31.
[In the following essay, Frye examines the images of clothing in King Lear, noting the importance of clothing as an element of disguise in Shakespearean drama.]
Everyone feels that the moment when Lear begins to tear off his clothes on seeing Poor Tom is one of almost unlimited significance. The gesture is related to images of clothing that run throughout the play, so here action and poetry meet and reinforce one another. And they convey both emotion and idea in a way which makes the two inseparable. Here is one of the moments at which it is most clear, as clear as that Shakespeare is not a “dramatist of ideas,” that he is a dramatist of attitudes. In perfectly realistic fashion, passions in Shakespeare are regularly related, as cause or effect, to what Arthur Sewell calls “addresses to the...
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- Criticism: Overviews And General Studies
- Criticism: Character Studies
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Criticism: Themes
- Sears Jayne (essay date spring 1964)
- Dean Frye (essay date March 1965)
- Joseph Wittreich (essay date 1984)
- Cherrell Guilfoyle (essay date 1990)
- June Schlueter (essay date 1995)
- Richard Knowles (essay date spring 1999)
- Susan Viguers (essay date March 2000)
- Michael Edwards (essay date autumn 2000)
- Alan Rosen (essay date 2001)
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