ABSTRACT

Most of Shakespeare’s tragedies have a family drama at their heart. This book brings these relationships to life, offering a radical new perspective on the tragic heroes and their dilemmas. Family Dramas: Intimacy, Power and Systems in Shakespeare's Tragedies focusses on the interactions and dialogues between people on stage, linking their intimate emotional worlds to wider social and political contexts.

Since family relationships absorb and enact social ideologies, their conflicts often expose the conflicts that all ideologies contain. The complexities, contradictions and ambiguities of Shakespeare’s portrayals of individuals and their relationships are brought to life, while wider power structures and social discourses are shown to reach into the heart of intimate relationships and personal identity. Surveying relevant literature from Shakespeare studies, the book introduces the ideas behind the family systems approach to literary criticism. Explorations of gender relationships feature particularly strongly in the analysis since it is within gender that intimacy and power most compellingly intersect and frequently collide.

For Shakespeare lovers and psychotherapists alike, this application of systemic theory opens a new perspective on familiar literary territory.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|22 pages

A family systems approach

chapter 2|23 pages

Interpretations of the tragedies

chapter 3|29 pages

“O curse`d spite, that ever I was born to set it right!”

Legacies and alternative identities in Hamlet

chapter 4|28 pages

“Being weak, seem so”

Power, status and identity loss in King Lear

chapter 5|28 pages

“And yet how nature, erring from itself”

Racism, gender and intimate violence in Othello

chapter 6|28 pages

“Wrenched with an unlineal hand”

The dynamics of violence in Macbeth

chapter 7|25 pages

“Let me have war, say I”

Man as a fighting machine in Coriolanus

chapter 8|22 pages

“Let Rome in Tiber melt”

Subverting Roman identity in Anthony and Cleopatra

chapter 9|25 pages

“The noblest-hateful love”

Contradiction and irreverence in Troilus and Cressida

chapter 10|26 pages

“Tis but thy name that is my enemy”

Freedom and constraint in Romeo and Juliet

chapter 11|4 pages

Endings