TY - BOOK AU - Whitfield,Peter ED - Bodleian Library, TI - Mapping Shakespeare's world SN - 9781851242573 AV - PR 3014 W595m 2015 U1 - 822.33 PY - 2015/// CY - Oxford PB - Bodleian Library, University of Oxford KW - Shakespeare, William, KW - Geography in literature KW - Cartography KW - History N1 - Includes bibliographical references (page 192) and index; Greece, Rome & the Mediterranean -- The dramas of European cities & courts -- British plays, ancient, medieval & modern N2 - Shakespeare never set a play in his own Elizabethan London. From the castle in Elsinore where Hamlet avenges his father's death to Cleopatra's Alexandria at the height of the Roman Empire to the seaport town in Cyprus where we await the arrival of Othello, each of Shakespeare's plays is set in a time or space remote from his primary audience. Why is this? How much did the Bard and his contemporaries know about the foreign lands his characters often inhabit? What expectations did an audience have if the curtains rose on a play which claimed to take place in ancient Troy or the Pyrenean kingdom of Navarre in northern Spain? Mapping Shakespeare's World explores these questions with surprising results. It has often been said that setting is irrelevant to Shakespeare's plays -- that, wherever they are set, their enduring appeal lies in their ability to speak to broad questions of human nature. Peter Whitfield shows that, on the contrary, many of Shakespeare's locations were carefully chosen for their ability to convey subtle meanings an Elizabethan audience would have picked up on and understood. Through the use of paintings, drawings, contemporary maps and geographical texts, Whitfield suggests answers to such questions as where Illyria was located, why The Merry Wives of Windsor could only have taken place in Windsor, and how two utterly different comedies -- The Comedy of Errors and Pericles, Prince of Tyre -- both came to take place in ancient Ephesus ER -