Why does Shakespearean tragedy continue to move spectators even
though Elizabethan philosophical assumptions have faded from belief? Shakespearean Tragedy and Its Double seeks answers in the
moment-by-moment dynamics of performance and response, and the Shakespearean
text signals those possibilities.
Shakespearean Tragedy and Its Double investigates the poetics
of audience response. Approaching tragedy through the rhythms of
spectatorial engagement and detachment ("aesthetic distance"), Kent
Cartwright provides a performance-oriented and phenomenological
perspective. Shakespearean Tragedy and Its Double analyzes
the development of the tragic audience as it oscillates between
engagement—an immersion in narrative, character, and physical
action—and detachment—a consciousness of its own comparative
judgments, it doubts and of acting and theatricality. Cartwright
contends that the spectator emerges as a character implied and acted
upon by the play. He supports his theory with close readings of
individual plays from the perspective of a particular element of
spectatorial response: the carnicalesque qualities of Romeo and
Juliet; the rhythm of similitude, displacement, and wonder in
the audience's relationships to Hamlet; aesthetic distance
as scenic structure in Othello; the influence of secondary
characters and ensemble acting on the Quarto King Lear; and
spectatorship as action itself in Antony and Cleopatra.
Shakespearean Tragedy and Its Double treats the dramatic
moment in Shakespearean tragedy as uncommonly charged, various,
indeterminate, always negotiating unpredictably between the necessary
and the spontaneous. Cartwright argues that, for the audience, the
very dynamism of tragedy confers a certain enfranchisement, and
the spectator's experience emerges as analogous to, though different
from, that of the protagonist. Through its own engagement and detachments
the audience becomes the final performer creating the play's meaning.
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