Witches and Jesuits

Shakespeare's Macbeth

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 14, 2024 | History

Witches and Jesuits

Shakespeare's Macbeth

  • 0 Ratings
  • 2 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 1 Have read

In his Pulitzer Prize-winning 1993 book Lincoln at Gettysburg, Garry Wills showed how the Gettysburg Address revolutionized the conception of modern America. In Witches and Jesuits, Wills again focuses on a single document to open up a window on an entire society. He begins with a simple question: If Macbeth is such a great tragedy, why do performances of it so often fail? The stage history of Macbeth has created a legendary curse on the drama.

Superstitious actors try to evade the curse by referring to Macbeth only as "the Scottish play," but production after production continues to soar in its opening scenes, only to sputter towards anticlimax in the later acts. By critical consensus there seems to have been only one entirely successful modern performance of the play, Laurence Olivier's in 1955.

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Drawing on his intimate knowledge of the vivid intrigue and drama of Jacobean England, Wills restores Macbeth's suspenseful tension by returning it to the context of its own time, recreating the burning theological and political crises of Shakespeare's era.

He reveals how deeply Macbeth's original 1606 audiences would have been affected by the Gunpowder Plot of 1605, when a small cell of plotters came within a hairbreadth of successfully blowing up not only the King, but the Prince his heir, and all members of the court and Parliament. Wills likens their shock to that endured by Americans following Pearl Harbor or the Kennedy assassination. Furthermore, Wills documents, the Jesuits were widely believed to be behind the Plot, acting in conjunction with the Devil, and so pervasive was the fear of witches that just two years before Macbeth's first performance, King James I added to the witchcraft laws a decree of death for those who procured "the skin, bone, or any other part of any dead person - to be employed or used in any manner of witchcraft, sorcery, charm, or enchantment." We see that the treason and necromancy in Macbeth were more than the imaginings of a gifted playwright - they were dramatizations of very real and potent threats to the realm.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
223

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Witches and Jesuits
Witches and Jesuits: Shakespeare's Macbeth
1995, New York Public Library, Oxford University Press, Oxford University Press, USA
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 167-202) and indexes.
Based on a series of lectures.

Published in
New York, New York, Oxford

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
822.3/3
Library of Congress
PR2823 .W49 1995, PR2823.W49 1995

The Physical Object

Pagination
ix, 223 p. ;
Number of pages
223

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1090076M
ISBN 10
0195088794
LCCN
94014201
OCLC/WorldCat
30076765
Library Thing
553757
Goodreads
1042118

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