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Set in successive decades from the 1960s to the possible near future, the six short stories in Graham Bradshaw's collection shine a spotlight on relationships, the great delight and puzzle in most lives. While the decades change and technology races on, the need to love and be loved defies the years and conventions.
Pages in a Life charts the encounters in courtrooms, council chambers and sports fields that helped to start a young journalist's career. His journey reflects his work in a vibrant and lively town in the Nottinghamshire coalfield and a path filled with laughs and surprises, taking in everything from the cricket star Harold Larwood to the notorious 'Black Panther' Donald Neilson.
Presents a section on 'European Shakespeares', proceeding from the claim that Shakespeare's literary craft was not just native English or British, but was filtered and fashioned through a Renaissance awareness that needs to be recognized as European, and that has had effects and afterlives across the Continent.
A collection of essays from South African critics that examine the treatment of Shakespeare's work in South Africa as an aspect of colonial history. It shows how the titanic political and ideological struggles that convulsed South Africa throughout the period also affected the way that Shakespeare was studied, interpreted, taught and performed.
Just at the moment when conflicts between critical "isms" are threatening to turn the study of English literature into a game park for endangered texts, Bradshaw arrives with a work of liberating wit and insight. His subject is double: the Shakespeare...
The veteran and provocative Shakespeare critic Graham Bradshaw shows why so many critics have been wrong about Shakespeare’s greatest play.
In this short guide, Graham Bradshaw explains the secrets in and behind one of the greatest short novels of all time.
Graham Bradshaw shows us that Macbeth is a much more terrifying play than most traditionalist critics believe it to be.
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