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Mingling Kings and Clowns Mingling Kings and Clowns
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Getting Rid of Bad Luck by Comedy Getting Rid of Bad Luck by Comedy
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The Trial of Carnival in Part Two The Trial of Carnival in Part Two
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Eight Rule and Misrule in Henry IV
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Published:October 2011
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Abstract
This chapter examines Shakespeare's Henry IV. The two parts of Henry IV are an astonishing development of drama in the direction of inclusiveness, a development possible because of the range of the traditional culture and the popular theater, but realized only because Shakespeare's genius for construction matched his receptivity. Early in his career, Shakespeare made brilliant use of the long standing tradition of comic accompaniment and counterstatement by the clown. Now suddenly he takes the diverse elements in the potpourri of the popular chronicle play and composes a structure in which they draw each other out. The implications of the saturnalian attitude are more drastically and inclusively expressed here than anywhere else, because here misrule is presented along with rule and along with the tensions that challenge rule. Shakespeare dramatizes not only holiday but also the need for holiday and the need to limit holiday.
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