Dreaming of God: a critical re-evaluation of Shakespeare's theological context, with particular reference to 'Hamlet'Tools Down, Therese Marie (2025) Dreaming of God: a critical re-evaluation of Shakespeare's theological context, with particular reference to 'Hamlet'. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractDominant Material Shakespeare criticism treats religion as pre-modern and not seriously influential in the plays, beyond its political use in oppressive popular control. Postmodern and Marxist critiques detect secularity in Shakespeare and generally posit as its source Florio’s translation of Montaigne’s Essays, which could have caused a Shakespearean turn to Epicurean ‘atomism’ or Renaissance scepticism. Other critiques assume a contextual Calvinist consensus, and see in the Tragedies a theistically-eliminative defiance of a tyrannical deus absconditus, whose pre-Fall consignment of humanity to salvation or preterition renders redemptively-desperate any human free will exercise to choose or avoid sin. Christian doctrine is not frequently explored positively in relation to Shakespeare’s work.
Actions (Archive Staff Only)
|