L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest

If Shakespeare’s Renaissance contemporaries were keen on efficiency and “progress” (in the sense of “onward movement in space”), they also particularly enjoyed labyrinthine ways which distracted them from their primary purposes. I therefore propose to explore the deviations in three very different p...

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Main Author: Sophie Alatorre
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2008-03-01
Series:Revue LISA
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/393
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author Sophie Alatorre
author_facet Sophie Alatorre
author_sort Sophie Alatorre
collection DOAJ
description If Shakespeare’s Renaissance contemporaries were keen on efficiency and “progress” (in the sense of “onward movement in space”), they also particularly enjoyed labyrinthine ways which distracted them from their primary purposes. I therefore propose to explore the deviations in three very different plays: Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida (1602), Othello (1603-1604) and The Tempest (1611). Keeping in mind that “to discourse” first meant “to run, move, or travel over a space”, today’s readers and spectators can still examine the twists and turns of seductive Shakespearean discourses pervaded by irregularities, amplification, irony and perversion. But not only is the dramatic world of the Elizabethan and Jacobean era based on stylistic erring, it is also deeply rooted in the art of perspective: we are continually made to change our points of view when we probe Shakespeare’s universes, teeming with deviant characters. Indeed, a labyrinthine scene necessarily echoes a problematic text. Oblique strategies are thus used by the playwright to generate extra-ordinary emotions: weaving a dramatic web to ensnare the spectators, Shakespeare creates a subversive art which fascinates precisely because of its refusal to follow well-traced, ordinary paths. Either in real life or on stage, only unexpected meanders can provoke men’s amazement…
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spelling doaj-art-321b8bde010d475b99082cdeedac030f2025-01-06T09:01:56ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532008-03-016318219710.4000/lisa.393L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The TempestSophie AlatorreIf Shakespeare’s Renaissance contemporaries were keen on efficiency and “progress” (in the sense of “onward movement in space”), they also particularly enjoyed labyrinthine ways which distracted them from their primary purposes. I therefore propose to explore the deviations in three very different plays: Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida (1602), Othello (1603-1604) and The Tempest (1611). Keeping in mind that “to discourse” first meant “to run, move, or travel over a space”, today’s readers and spectators can still examine the twists and turns of seductive Shakespearean discourses pervaded by irregularities, amplification, irony and perversion. But not only is the dramatic world of the Elizabethan and Jacobean era based on stylistic erring, it is also deeply rooted in the art of perspective: we are continually made to change our points of view when we probe Shakespeare’s universes, teeming with deviant characters. Indeed, a labyrinthine scene necessarily echoes a problematic text. Oblique strategies are thus used by the playwright to generate extra-ordinary emotions: weaving a dramatic web to ensnare the spectators, Shakespeare creates a subversive art which fascinates precisely because of its refusal to follow well-traced, ordinary paths. Either in real life or on stage, only unexpected meanders can provoke men’s amazement…https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/393
spellingShingle Sophie Alatorre
L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest
Revue LISA
title L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest
title_full L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest
title_fullStr L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest
title_full_unstemmed L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest
title_short L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest
title_sort l art du detour selon shakespeare les deviations de troilus and cressida d othello et de the tempest
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/393
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