King Lear (Vol. 61) | Paul W. Kahn (essay date 2000)
Paul W. Kahn (essay date 2000)
SOURCE: “Love's Trials,” in Law and Love: The Trials of King Lear, Yale University Press, 2000, pp. 1-28.
[In the following essay, Kahn posits that at the center of King Lear is a treatise on the exclusivity of love and political power.]
Love and political power are central themes of King Lear. In the course of the play, Lear moves from power to love and back to power. The tragic action of the play is brought on by efforts to breach the separation between love and power, to mold power by love, or to infuse love with power. But what is appropriate for love is inappropriate for power, and what is appropriate for power is inappropriate for love. Man must die to power if he is to love purely. Or he must restrain love if he is to rule effectively. This, in the most abstract and summary form, is the philosophical and moral vision that the play explores.1
Lear's plan as the play...
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