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This book offers a new approach to the discussion of English Renaissance literary subjectivity. Dissatisfied with much New Historicist and Cultural Materialistic criticism, it attempts to trace the history of the controversies of self. William Hazlitt emerges as a pioneering figure in a tradition of literary criticism which this book tries to advance. Drawing on the personal construct theory of George A. Kelly, and on the moral theory of Alasdair MacIntyre, the textual ways are traced by which 'That within' Hamlet is constructed. In an argument that challenges some of the founding propositions of New Historicist and Cultural Materialist practice, the Prince is seen to have a self-constituting, as opposed to a self-fashioning, sense of self. This sense of self is neither essentialist nor transhistorical; using the work of Charles Taylor , the play is seen to be exploring a Montaignesque, as opposed to Cartesian, notion of subjectivity. The controversies of self are, in fact, an issue within Shakespeare's play; and if the notion of Folio and Quarto Princes is allowed, it may even be at issue within the play. Hamlet debates our debate.
John Lee is Lecturer in English, University of Bristol
Introduction ; 1 ; 2. Fear and Wonder ; 3. Something More than Fantasy ; 4. Fools of Nature ; 5. A Wave o' th' Sea ; 6. My Tables, My Tables ; 7. A King of Infinite Space ; 8. The Princes Hamlet ; Bibliography ; Index
A unique and fresh lens through which to view notions of early modern interiority ... Lee does an admirable job of coupling theory with practice in the final chapters and provides an interesting view of what we might call Hamlet's interior. The book is well researched and has far-reaching implications for those scholars interested in the controversies surrounding early modern subjectivity.