<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This book on Shakespeare's language is the first to explore how we modern American or English-speaking readers hear, understand, fail to understand, are amused, disturbed, bored, moved, and challenged by it today.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>This book on Shakespeare's language is the first to explore how we modern American or English-speaking readers hear, understand, fail to understand, are amused, disturbed, bored, moved, and challenged by it today.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Blank returns the reader to the act of luxuriating in the opulent richness of Shakespeare's language like no other scholar I have ever encountered. <i>Shakesplish: How We Read Shakespeare's Language</i> will be consulted for decades to come because of its indefatigable energy and exuberate erudition.--William Reginald Rampone "<i>Sixteenth Century Journal</i>"<br><br>As Paula Blank argues, whether or not we are dipping into a 'No Fear' edition, we are always paraphrasing Shakespeare. Shamelessly fun to read, this original and timely book should have broad appeal.--Julia Reinhard Lupton "University of California, Irvine"<br><br>In her worthy sequel to <i>Broken English</i>, Paula Blank meditates provocatively on the 'friction' induced by our distance from early modern English. <i>Shakesplish</i> confronts and celebrates that distance, giving voice to a past now revived for our era.--Scott Newstok, Director, Pearce Shakespeare Endowment "Rhodes College"<br><br>This beautifully conceived book argues for a new and suggestive way of making Shakespeare our contemporary, at once familiar and exotic. Focusing on Shakespeare's language not as he might have intended it but as we understand it today, Paula Blank shows how what registers to a modern reader as the difficulty or strangeness of Shakespeare actually provokes singularly rich forms of cultural and personal self-discovery.--Geoffrey Harpham, Kenan Institute for Ethics "Duke University"<br><br>We owe Paula Blank much thanks for bequeathing to us a book that I would not hesitate to describe as possessing the same traits she has analyzed for us--a book that is 'beautiful', 'funny', 'smart', and yes, even 'sexy': seductive, that is, in the elegant and articulate way in which it helps reveal to us our innermost desires about what Shakespeare's language should be.--Iolanda Plescia "<i>Memoria di Shakespeare</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Paula Blank</b> (1959-2016) was Margaret L. Hamilton Professor of English at the College of William and Mary and the author of <i>Broken English</i> (1996) and <i>Shakespeare and the Mismeasure of Man</i> (2006).
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