New Heaven, New Earth

Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra

By (author) Jan H. Blits

Publication date:

16 June 2009

Length of book:

238 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

240x162mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780739138236

Patterned after his previous books on Shakespeare's plays, Jan H. Blits's New Heaven, New Earth is a scene-by-scene, line-by-line philosophical study of Antony and Cleopatra. Combining close attention to detail with interpretive breadth, Blits approaches Shakespeare as a first-rank thinker who, master of his own thought and writing, produced plays and poetry with an infinitely conscious art, like any commonly recognized philosophical poet. Treating the play as a fully coherent whole, Blits shows that Antony and Cleopatra, as much a history play as a love story, depicts the transition from the pagan to the Christian world—from the aftermath of the collapse of the Roman Republic and the decline of the pagan gods to the emergence of the Roman Empire and the conditions giving rise to Christianity. Instead of being organized thematically, New Heaven, New Earth follows the play from beginning to end, closely examining Shakespeare's text on its own terms and not on the terms of modern literary theory. Using this approach, Blits draws significant and insightful conclusions that will satisfy the interests of scholars of politics, literature, and history alike.
Unlike the typical commentator, Blits brings to bear on his reading of each line the relevance of every other line prior to or subsequent to the passage he examines. In this his sixth book on Shakespeare, Blits proves for the sixth time his maverick wisdom of keying critical findings to the dramatic sequence line by line. Rather than sifting for evidence on behalf of prefabricated theses, Blits allows Shakespeare's meanings to foliate as the dramatist intended they should. He has provided an additional attraction by making readers aware of the pertinence of numerous Greek and Roman authors ranging much beyond the play's acknowledged source in Plutarch.