Iconic Characters: Richard III

Author(s):  
Laura Silva
Keyword(s):  
Moreana ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 42 (Number 163) (3) ◽  
pp. 79-92
Author(s):  
Douglas Bruster
Keyword(s):  

For his drama Richard III Shakespeare clearly relied on More’s narrative as filtered mainly through the chronicles of Edward Hall and Raphael Holinshed. The complications of transmission and authority relating to Shakespeare’s use of More’s unfinished work, and to the numerous forms each text would come to assume, uncannily replicate the very issues of authority and validation their narratives scrutinize. With his account More produced an archetype of modern, cunning individualism, an archetype that Shakespeare would popularize in Richard III.


Moreana ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 43 & 44 (Number (4 & 1-2) ◽  
pp. 85-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Germain Marc’Hadour
Keyword(s):  

Résumé Les trois corps du titre sont le corps physique de l’homme, le corps du Christ dans l’Eucharistie, et son Corps mystique, qui est l’Eglise. Le premier est représenté par le portrait qu’Erasme fit de son ami londonien, et par les portraits que More lui-même fit de Pic, de Mrs Shore, maitresse d’Edouard IV, et de Richard III. Outre le terme de ‘body’, More emploie celui de ‘corps’ lorsqu’il se réfere au ‘Corps entier de la Chrétienté’, c’est-à-dire l’ensemble des nations qui constituaient l’Europe catholique. Quelques paragraphes examinent les rapports du corps avec l’âme et l’esprit, ainsi que la place privilégiée de l’œil et de la main.


XVII-XVIII ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis Roux
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicoletta Caputo
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
John Kerrigan

That Shakespeare adds a limp to the received characterization of Richard III is only the most conspicuous instance of his interest in how actors walked, ran, danced, and wandered. His attention to actors’ footwork, as an originating condition of performance, can be traced from Richard III through A Midsummer Night’s Dream and As You Like It into Macbeth, which is preoccupied with the topic and activity all the way to the protagonist’s melancholy conclusion that ‘Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player | That struts and frets his hour upon the stage’. Drawing on classical and early modern accounts of how people walk and should walk, on ideas about time and prosody, and the experience of disability, this chapter cites episodes in the history of performance to show how actors, including Alleyn, Garrick, and Olivier, have worked with the opportunities to dramatize footwork that are provided by Shakespeare’s plays.


Author(s):  
Thomas Cartelli
Keyword(s):  

This chapter examines the commentative words and silences of the citizenry in Richard III, noting that although silence was customarily expected from commoners in the presence of the elite, it could also signify, in both Shakespeare’s version of Richard’s reign and Thomas More’s, the inscrutable resistance of a dissident citizenry. In London, citizen debate and discussion, informed and intelligent, comprised an important forum of Elizabethan public life; and in Shakespeare’s play, citizen non-compliance with the manipulative fabrications of Richard and Buckingham disrupts the performance/reception dynamic to undercut the bonding of the theatre’s citizen audience with the hitherto charismatic Richard. Though their speaking silence betokens the proud heritage of citizen resistance to royal and aristocratic presumption and contempt, Richard and Buckingham obtusely misread this as obtuseness, revealing themselves to be held in a kind of self-hypnosis by the public transcript, memorably subverted by Shakespeare.


Author(s):  
Ceri Sullivan

Abstract The political and dramatic intentions behind the use of appeals to the early modern public (on and off stage) have already been examined by Shakespeareans. This article points out the technical workings of such appeals by using two new areas of research on decision-making: the ethnography of public meetings and behavioural economics on how to influence choosers. These theories can illuminate the strategies used by the tribunes in handling the citizens of Coriolanus, by Antony in dealing with the plebeians in Julius Caesar, and by Buckingham and Richard when gathering support from the Londoners in Richard III. Using six common psychological biases (anchor-and-adjust, availability, representativeness, priming, arousal, and group norms), Shakespeare’s politicians prompt their hearers to change their minds: a celebrity warrior is recast as a wily tyrant, an execution as a murder, and a regent as the legitimate king.


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