Front cover image for Particular saints : Shakespeare's four Antonios, their contexts, and their plays

Particular saints : Shakespeare's four Antonios, their contexts, and their plays

"Why do characters named Antonio proliferate on the English Renaissance stage? Why are they so often paired with other characters named Sebastian? And more significantly, why are they repeatedly characterized by Shakespeare and his contemporaries as fools for love? Particular Saints draws on church history, art history, and theater history to address these questions by illustrating that Renaissance stage Antonios are a type, representing a tradition familiar to early modern audiences and exploited by Shakespeare in portraying his four major characters named Antonio." "Such characters ultimately derive from the rich medieval iconography and hagiography of Saint Anthony of Egypt. How this knowledge reinforms our late-twentieth-century understanding of the four plays in question is addressed in separate chapters that range widely across each work: The Merchant of Venice, Twelfth Night, Antony and Cleopatra, and The Tempest."--Jacket
Print Book, English, ©1997
University of Delaware Press ; Associated University Presses, Newark, Del., London, ©1997
History
250 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
9780874136302, 087413630X
36074351
I. Introduction: Particular saints: Shakespeare's four Antonios and their contexts
"Wise me, folly-fall'n": Characters named "Antonio" in English Renaissance drama
"A foolish consistency": Antonio and alienation in The merchant of Venice
"Willing love": Antonio, Viola, and Epiphany in Twelfth night
"The world's great snare": Antony, Cleopatra, and game
Prospero's "false brother": Shakespeare's final Antonio
II. Conclusion: "No way out but through": Shakespeare's Antonios and the wisdom of this world