The Two Gentlemen of Verona (Cambridge School Shakespeare) Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Two Gentlemen of Verona (Cambridge School Shakespeare) Book

One of Shakespeare's earliest comedies, and unjustly neglected in the past, The Two Gentlemen of Verona has deserved its growing critical reputation over recent years. The play dramatises the entangled relations between the two gentlemen of the play's title, Valentine and Proteus. Valentine leaves Verona for Milan to seek his fortune, while Proteus stays to be near his love, Julia. Spurned by Julia, Proteus heads for Milan, where he finds himself a rival of Valentine for the hand of Silvia, the Duke's daughter. Julia then reappears, disguised in boy's clothes as Proteus' page. As in many of Shakespeare's later comedies, the lovers flee to the forest, where confusion and conflict is finally resolved, and the two gentlemen are reunited not only with their "correct" lovers, but also with each other. The play is particularly interesting for its dramatisation of the intense friendship between Valentine and Proteus, which it often characterises as more intimate and meaningful than relations with women. Proteus complains that Julia "hast metamorphosed me" into something he cannot understand, and the play suggests that social and sexual relations between men are often more satisfying than the dangerous instability involved in wooing women. --Jerry BrottonRead More

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  • Foyles

    Like every other play in the Cambridge School Shakespeare series, The Two Gentlemen of Verona has been specially prepared to help all students in schools and colleges. This version aims to be different from other editions of the play. It invites you to bring the play to life in your classroom through enjoyable activities that will help increase your understanding. You are encourage to make up your own mind about the play, rather than have someone else's interpretation handed down to you. Whatever you do, remember that Shakespeare wrote his plays to be acted, watched and enjoyed.

  • 0521446031
  • 9780521446037
  • William Shakespeare
  • 4 August 1994
  • Cambridge University Press
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 164
  • New Ed
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