Don Carlos and Mary Stuart: Adapted in Verse Drama (Oxford World's Classics)

Don Carlos and Mary Stuart: Adapted in Verse Drama (Oxford World's Classics)

by J.C.F.vonSchiller (Author), PeterOswald (Contributor), Lesley Sharpe (Contributor), HilaryCollierSy-Quia (Contributor)

Synopsis

Don Carlos and Mary Stuart, two of German literature's greatest dramas, deal with the timeless issues of power, freedom, and justice. Dating from 1787 and 1800 respectively, one play was written before the French Revolution, the other in its aftermath. Both dramatize periods of crisis in sixteenth-century Europe, and in doing so reflect Schiller's passionate engagement with the great themes of his own age - justice, power, freedom of conscience, legitimacy of government. A youthful work, Don Carlos shows the victory of the forces of reaction over the representatives of a new age. Mary Stuart shows the struggle of the Scottish queen in her last days of her life, not only for her freedom, but also for peace with her conscience, and that of her English rival, Elizabeth I, with the challenge of ruling justly. A vivid imaginative experience when read, these plays, with their starkly contrasting characters and thrilling confrontations, also demonstrate Schiller's brilliant stagecraft. These new translations into blank verse are accurate, elegant, and playable.The introduction, notes, and chronology set the plays in their cultural and intellectual background, while a family tree explains the historical relationship bewteen Don Carlos and Mary Stuart.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 400
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
Published: 04 Nov 1999

ISBN 10: 0192839853
ISBN 13: 9780192839855

Media Reviews
fast-paced, tense, eloquent, and philosophical, this translation recaptures the effect of Schiller on his first readers for contemporary ones. With its precision and clarity, it gives us a Schiller both true to his time and up-to-date. --William Arctander O'Brien, University of California at San
Diego


fast-paced, tense, eloquent, and philosophical, this translation recaptures the effect of Schiller on his first readers for contemporary ones. With its precision and clarity, it gives us a Schiller both true to his time and up-to-date. --William Arctander O'Brien, University of California at San
Diego

fast-paced, tense, eloquent, and philosophical, this translation recaptures the effect of Schiller on his first readers for contemporary ones. With its precision and clarity, it gives us a Schiller both true to his time and up-to-date. --William Arctander O'Brien, University of California at San Diego


fast-paced, tense, eloquent, and philosophical, this translation recaptures the effect of Schiller on his first readers for contemporary ones. With its precision and clarity, it gives us a Schiller both true to his time and up-to-date. --William Arctander O'Brien, University of California at San Diego