Home > Shakespearean Criticism > The Two Noble Kinsmen (Vol. 70) - Alan Stewart (essay date 1999)

The Two Noble Kinsmen (Vol. 70) - Alan Stewart (essay date 1999)

Alan Stewart (essay date 1999)

SOURCE: Stewart, Alan. “‘Near Akin’: The Trials of Friendship in The Two Noble Kinsmen.” In Shakespeare's Late Plays: New Readings, edited by Jennifer Richards and James Knowles, pp. 57-71. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1999.

[In the following essay, Stewart investigates the nature of the failure of Palamon and Arcite's idealized male friendship depicted in The Two Noble Kinsmen, suggesting that the relationship was doomed because of the conflict between humanist and chivalric notions of male friendship, and the realities of male relations and kinship bonds in Jacobean England.]

Critics have never been happy with The Two Noble Kinsmen.1 It has traditionally been regarded as an unsatisfactory play, compromised, in Ann Thompson's words, by ‘many tensions and inconsistencies’;2 to at least one critic, it remains ‘that most distressing of...

[The entire page is 6905 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: