Shakespeare’s Sugared Sonnets

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A01=Katharine M. Wilson
Act III
Author_Katharine M. Wilson
Category=DSC
chivalric love
early modern literary humour
Elizabethan
Elizabethan poetry analysis
Elizabethan Sonnet
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Erasmus
Fair Child
Heavenly Love
High Aspiring
Holly Flame
intertextuality in Renaissance literature
literary parody studies
Mine Eye
Ovid
Ovidian influence English verse
parodies
parody
parody of sonnet tradition research
Plato
poetry
Previous Sonnet
Shakespeare's early comedies
Shakespeare's Friend
Shakespeare's Parody
Shakespeare's Sonnet
Shakespeare’s Friend
Shakespeare’s Parody
Shakespeare’s Sonnet
Sidney's Sonnet
Sidney’s Sonnet
Sir Thomas Wyat
sonnet convention
sonnet conventions critique
sonnet in song
Sonnet Iv
Sonnet Love
Sonnet Tradition
Sonnet Writing
Spenser's Sonnet
Spenser’s Sonnet
Stella's Eyes
Stella’s Eyes
Sugared Sonnets
Thou Mayst
Time's Scythe
Time’s Scythe
Vice Versa
Wide World's Common Place
Wide World’s Common Place
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367684969
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the course of some research into the musical element in English poetry, Dr Wilson read the work of the Elizabethan sonneteers chronologically and was struck by a suspicion that Shakespeare’s sonnets were parodies. Later she carried out a more thorough investigation, and this book, originally published in 1974, is the product: her early impressions had been justified beyond all expectation.

Her investigation involved examining the background of each of Shakespeare’s sonnets, and this in itself is a contribution to scholarship. A surprising number of them are shown to be direct parodies of particular sonnets; all of them guy the sonnet convention, and the more difficult ones are easily explained by this hypothesis. Fresh correspondences between Shakespeare and his predecessors have come to light and his relationship with them is seen to be mocking. This is demonstrated in his borrowings from Ovid also, while the opening seventeen sonnets gain point as parody of Erasmus on marriage.

The book opens with a short note on the origin of the sonnet in song, chivalric love and Plato. The sonnet theme in Shakespeare’s early comedies is treated freshly and the author throws light on the plays from a new angle. In the final chapter, among other themes, the implication of dating is considered, and here too some new material is discussed.

However, Dr Wilson is aiming at a wider readership than that of scholars alone. She has a view of Shakespeare as a young man catering for "young-man laughter", as she puts it, and she never loses sight of this aspect in her study. Although the academic basis is there, the presentation is not academic. Her aim is clearly to share the joke with her readers.

Katharine M. Wilson

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