An edition of "Hamlet" free of "deconstructionistic, biased bunk"

Faith, writing on her blog, Strewing, has praise for the Ignatius Critical Edition (ICE) of Hamlet:


If you are tired of postmodernist professors writing cockamamie literary analysis that makes you roll your eyeballs at their narrow, deconstructionistic, biased bunk, fret no more! I loved reading both Joseph Pearce's wonderfully in depth Introduction and the several essays at the end of the book. I especially enjoyed Crystal Downing of Messiah College's essay entitled: Reading Hamlet and Richard Harp's of the University of Nevada, essay entitled The Nobility of Hamlet. In fact I've decided that Professor Harp is brilliant because he clarified to me why I was always dissatisfied with seeing Hamlet's problem as one of indecision. I also enjoyed Andrew Moran's essay, Hamlet's Envenomed Foil which really illuminated the tension between Protestantism and Catholicism that Shakespeare so cleverly and brilliantly unfolds in this play.


Read her entire post.

The ICE edition of Hamlet is available in paperback or in e-book format; there is also a study guide. For more about the Ignatius Critical Editions, which now includes fifteen titles, visit www.IgnatiusCriticalEditions.com. Coming soon: Bram Stoker's Dracula, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, Metaphysical Poets (Donne, Crashaw, Herbert, etc.), and Romantic Poets (Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats, Byron, Shelley, etc.).

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Published on June 26, 2011 23:08
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