Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare’s Middle Comedies: A Generation of Criticism
- ‘Perfect Types of Womanhood’: Rosalind, Beatrice and Viola in Victorian Criticism and Performance
- The Stage Representation of the ‘Kill Claudio’ Sequence in Much Ado About Nothing
- As You Like It Adapted: Charles Johnson’s Love in a Forest
- Social Relations and the Social Order in Much Ado About Nothing
- Sexual Disguise in As You Like It and Twelfth Night
- Twelfth Night and the Myth of Echo and Narcissus
- ‘Smiling at grief’: Some Techniques of Comedy in Twelfth Night and Così Fan Tutte
- ‘My Lady’s a Catayan, we are politicians, Maluolios a Peg-a-ramsie’ (Twelfth Night II, iii, 77-8)
- The Importance of Being Marcade
- A Hebrew Source for The Merchant of Venice
- The Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure: A Reconsideration
- Richard III: Antecedents of Clarence’s Dream
- Deep Plots and Indiscretions in ‘The Murder of Gonzago’
- ‘What is’t to leave betimes?’ Proverbs and Logic in Hamlet
- The Tempest: Language and Society
- Pictorial Evidence for a Possible Replica of the London Fortune Theatre in Gdansk
- A Year of Comedies: Stratford 1978
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study: 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Index
- Plate section
A Hebrew Source for The Merchant of Venice
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare’s Middle Comedies: A Generation of Criticism
- ‘Perfect Types of Womanhood’: Rosalind, Beatrice and Viola in Victorian Criticism and Performance
- The Stage Representation of the ‘Kill Claudio’ Sequence in Much Ado About Nothing
- As You Like It Adapted: Charles Johnson’s Love in a Forest
- Social Relations and the Social Order in Much Ado About Nothing
- Sexual Disguise in As You Like It and Twelfth Night
- Twelfth Night and the Myth of Echo and Narcissus
- ‘Smiling at grief’: Some Techniques of Comedy in Twelfth Night and Così Fan Tutte
- ‘My Lady’s a Catayan, we are politicians, Maluolios a Peg-a-ramsie’ (Twelfth Night II, iii, 77-8)
- The Importance of Being Marcade
- A Hebrew Source for The Merchant of Venice
- The Marriage Contracts in Measure for Measure: A Reconsideration
- Richard III: Antecedents of Clarence’s Dream
- Deep Plots and Indiscretions in ‘The Murder of Gonzago’
- ‘What is’t to leave betimes?’ Proverbs and Logic in Hamlet
- The Tempest: Language and Society
- Pictorial Evidence for a Possible Replica of the London Fortune Theatre in Gdansk
- A Year of Comedies: Stratford 1978
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study: 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Prefatory note
The author of this essay, for all his unassuming bearing, was such an unusual and truly original personality that a few words about him may be in place. Born in Rumania in 1892, he received a traditional schooling in Biblical and Talmudic studies. Later in Vienna, he listened receptively to everything the University there had to offer. He belonged to the circle of Sigmund Freud, living on commissions from officework as a side-line. At that time he was already taking an interest in Shakespearian research. In 1938 he emigrated to Israel, where he gained a very modest living for himself and his family as an ill-paid official, devoting his nights to the study of Shakespeare, until his death in Haifa in 1951. He could never bring himself to publish this essay, as he considered it a ‘preliminary communication’, no more.
I had the privilege of being personally acquainted with Schonfeld, and it has also been my privilege to prepare this study for publication at the behest of his admirers. I have reduced the original text by more than half, written as it was in rather complicated German and with no little hair-splitting subtlety. I can only express the hope that in the process I have nowhere misinterpreted or misrepresented Schonfeld’s thinking.
The translation from the German is the work of Mrs Daphna Allon of Jerasulem. I wish to thank her for her more than professional interest.
Yehuda T. Radday- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 115 - 128Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1980