Hamlet, A Longman Cultural Edition, 2nd edition

Published by Pearson (December 6, 2004) © 2005

  • William Shakespeare
  • Constance Jordan Claremont Graduate University
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From Longman's new Cultural Edition series, Hamlet, edited by Constance Jordan, includes the play and contextual materials from the era of Shakespeare.

This edition represents Shakespeare's text as it appears in the most authoritative of early editions, the Folio, published in 1623, and it supplies students with useful footnotes to the interpretation of the text. It also includes brief samples of works by Shakespeare's contemporaries in a section entitled Contexts; which will help students understand the historical setting and cultural ideas that helped shape the meaning of Shakespeare's play. By listening to these voices from the past, students can approach the play with some knowledge of why Hamlet asks the questions he does and of why the character himself, the creation of a distant century, also seems so much a part of our own world.

The Longman Cultural Edition series is composed of teaching texts edited by prominent scholars. In addition to the recently published Cultural Editions Frankenstein, Pride and Prejudice, and Othello, titles in the series for this year include Dickens' Hard Times, Beowulf, and Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray.

List of Illustrations.

 

About Longman Cultural Editions.

 

About the Second Edition.

 

Introduction.

 

Table of Dates.

 

Hamlet, Prince of Denmark.

 

Contexts.

 

Spiritual and Mental Life.

 

JOSEPH HALL, from Meditations and Vows (1609).

 

LUDWIG LAVATER, from Of Ghosts and Spirits Walking by Night (1572).

 

GEORGE GIFFORD, from A Discourse of the Subtle Practices of Devils (1587).

 

SAMUEL HARSNETT, from A Discovery of the Fraudulent Practices of John Darrel (1599).

 

TIMOTHY BRIGHT, from A Treatise of Melancholy (1586).

 

ROBERT BURTON, from The Anatomy of Melancholy (1628).

 

Purgatory.

 

SIMON FISH, from A Supplication for the Beggars (1528).

 

MARTIN LUTHER,   from The Chief and Principal Articles of the Christian Faith (1548).

 

JOHN CALVIN, from The Institute of the Christian Religion (1536).

 

JOHN VÉRON, from The Hunting of Purgatory to Death (1561).

 

WILLIAM GOUGE, from The Whole Armor of God (1616).

 

JOHN FOXE, from The Ecclesiastical History, Containing Acts and Monuments (1583).

 

CARDINAL WILLIAM ALLEN, from A Defense and Declaration of the Catholic Church’s Doctrine, Touching Purgatory (1577).

 

ROBERT BELLARMINE, from The Art of Dying Well (1622).

 

Revenge.

 

THE BIBLE AND HOLY SCRIPTURES, from Genesis 4, 9-15 and Romans 12, 19 (1560).

 

THE HOLY BIBLE: REVISED STANDARD VERSION, from Genesis 4, 9-15 and Romans 12, 19 (1952).

 

WILLIAM DICKINSON, from The King’s Right (1619).

 

THOMAS BEARD, from The Theater of God’s Judgments (1597).

 

FRANCIS BACON, On Revenge, from Essays (1617).

 

ON THE COMMON LAW:   from William Lambarde’s Eirenarcha: or Of the Offices of the Justices of Peace (1594), Sir Thomas Smith’s The Commonwealth of England (1601, and Michael Dalton’s The Country Justice (1618).

 

Suicide.

 

MICHEL de MONTAIGNE, A custom of the Ile of Cea, from The Essays of Michael Lord of Montaigne, trans. John Florio (1603).

 

JOHN SYM, from Life’s Preservative against Self-Killing (1637).

 

JOHN DONNE, from Biathanatos (1647).

 

Sources.

 

SAXO GRAMMATICUS, from Historia Danicae, trans. Oliver Elton (1894).

 

Further Reading.

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