Henry IV Part One (Barnes & Noble Shakespeare):

$7.95 $4.05
You save $3.90
(No reviews yet) Write a Review
Author:
Kastan, David Scott
Number of Pages:
360
ISBN-13:
9781411499706
ISBN-10:
1411499700
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
04/25/2008
Publisher:
Barnes & Noble Shakespeare
Henry IV Part One (Barnes & Noble Shakespeare):  - ISBN: 9781411499706
Henry IV, Part One, by William Shakespeare, is part of the Barnes & Noble Shakespeare series.  This unique series features newly edited texts prepared by leading scholars from America and Great Britain, in collaboration with one of the world’s foremost Shakespeare authorities, David Scott Kastan of Columbia University. Together they have produced texts as faithful as possible to those that Shakespeare wrote.   Each volume in the Barnes & Noble Shakespeare includes: New Scholarship – Premiere scholars introduce each play with contemporary scholarship. An essay on editing the text provides an in-depth look at the quartos and folios used in the edition. Contextualizing Essays – Essays on Shakespeare’s England, language, and life, along with essays on performing Shakespeare and significant performances frame the play in both historical and theatrical context for readers. A look at the lasting influence of the play on music, art, film, and dance creates an interdisciplinary framework with which to approach the play. Better Notes – Through one-word margin definitions, facing-page glosses, and longer end notes after the play, our innovative approach to notes pulls readers away from the text fewer times while providing them with more information and comprehensive analysis. Further Reading – An annotated bibliography of titles, hand-selected by the introduction author, takes readers beyond the edition for further reading. The story of Prince Hal's unorthodox preparation for kingship, Henry IV, Part One features one of the most famous comic characters in all of literature-Sir John Falstaff. The editor, Matthew Dimmock, offers a concise picture of the actual historical events dramatized in the play, revealing what Shakespeare changed and why.