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Full Description
Exploring plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries, Mourning Men in Shakespeare's England argues that early modern
playwrights deployed the classical lament so to consider the profound
cultural trauma of the Reformation, but also complicate early
understandings of masculinity.
Contents
Introduction: The Masculine Lament on Shakespeare's Stage
Chapter One: Thomas Kyd's Spanish Tragedy and Revenge as Lamentation
Chapter Two: Marlowe's Masculine Grief
Chapter Three: Winning at Losing: Hamlet's Competitive Sorrow
Chapter Four: King Lear's Violent Grief
Chapter Five: When the Bad Grieve, Then is the Tragedy Good: Feigned Grief in The Revenger's Tragedy



