max theodore’s Reviews > Shakespeare After All > Status Update

max theodore
is on page 84 of 989
on titus: "Later Shakespearean tragedies, though they contain key moments of unspeakable bodily violation... often tend to translate and internalize such physical degredations into metaphors, rendering them metaphysical... But Titus Andronicus is in a way the radical--the root--of Shakespearean tragedy, the dreamscape or nightmare world laid out for all to see, not disguised by a retreat into metaphor."
— Sep 10, 2025 12:51PM
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max theodore
is on page 174 of 989
on CoE: "Like many of Shakespeare's comedies, The Comedy of Errors begins with an inflexible law and the human dilemma caused by the law's impersonal enforcement."
"...the threat of death frames all Shakespearean comedy. No character we meet in the course of a play will die, but outside, just beyond the boundary of the stage, death lurks and threatens. Comedy exists... poised between darkness and darkness."
— Sep 10, 2025 12:57PM
"...the threat of death frames all Shakespearean comedy. No character we meet in the course of a play will die, but outside, just beyond the boundary of the stage, death lurks and threatens. Comedy exists... poised between darkness and darkness."

max theodore
is on page 390 of 989
on much ado: "It is worth noting that in other Shakespearean comedies of this period the heroine does become a man, at least for a little while. Portia, Rosalind, and Viola all cross-dress, assuming male costumes and names in order to perform some act of rescue, release, or revenge. But Beatrice has this opinion only in the wishful form of a condition contrary to fact."
also, calling b&b "impervious sophisticates"
— Sep 10, 2025 12:48PM
also, calling b&b "impervious sophisticates"

max theodore
is on page 71 of 989
on taming: "When in the Induction the cross-dressed page tells Sly, 'I am your wife in all obedience' (Ind. 2.104), the question of wifely obedience is already put in play--especially when the first thing this 'wife' does is disobey her 'husband's' peremptory command, 'Madam, undress you and come now to bed' (113)."
— Sep 10, 2025 12:45PM

max theodore
is on page 56 of 989
forgot to post any quotes from each chapter so: two gents essay reads the play as "deliberately superficial" and an easily-available psychodrama where valentine and proteus kinda represent various facets of a person. i like when writers drag this one
— Sep 10, 2025 12:44PM

max theodore
is starting
most historic used bookstore steal of my life was finding this in good condition for $8 usd
— Mar 10, 2025 12:06PM
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Sep 10, 2025 02:27PM

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THE TITUS ONE IS MY FAVORITE SO FAR. really really great. have you heard emma smith's titus lecture? bc i also really love that; she goes in-deep on the batshit speech marcus gives lavinia (podcasts.ox.ac.uk /titus-andronicus)