The Merchant of Venice : All You Need to Know About the Play in One Concise Volume - Michael Neill

The Merchant of Venice

All You Need to Know About the Play in One Concise Volume

By: Michael Neill

Paperback | 8 November 2017

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In this short but comprehensive study, Michael Neill draws on a dazzling array of critics to tell us what Shakespeare's most controversial play is really about and what it tells about the world.

The Merchant of Venice is now the most contentious of Shakespeare's plays. Its only rival in this respect is Othello, and this is because both plays deal with dangerous issues of race. In Othello, Iago uses the protagonists colour both to goad his victims jealousy and to excite the animosity of Venetian's against this visible outsider; in The Merchant of Venice, Shylocks Jewishness renders him, from the beginning, the object of general opprobrium in Christian Venice. But whereas the Moor is treated as a generally sympathetic character, the Jew appears to be cast in an entirely negative light. Or so, at least, many critics believe.

In this book, however, one of the best respected critics of Shakespeare, Michael Neill, takes issue with this simplistic view, providing a fresh reading of the play and arguing that in it, as always, Shakespeare refuses to allow us the comfort of any single 'view of the world'.

About the Author

Michael Neill is Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and is the author of Issues of Death and Putting History to the Question; he has edited Anthony and Cleopatra and Othello for the Oxford Shakespeare, and a range of plays, including The Spanish Tragedy, The Duchess of Malfi, and The Changeling, for other series. Most recently he co-edited The Oxford Handbook of Shakespearean Tragedy.

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