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The Winter's Tale: Critical Essay by Aaron Kitch

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William Shakespeare
About 36 pages (10,883 words)
The Winter's Tale Summary

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SOURCE: Kitch, Aaron. “Bastards and Broadsides in The Winter's Tale.Renaissance Drama 30 (2001): 43-71.

In the following excerpt, Kitch examines Shakespeare's representation of the print industry as a metaphor for paternity and illegitimacy in The Winter's Tale. According to Kitch, this theme touches on broader Jacobean anxieties with regard to reproduction in both the sexual sense—such as concerns about adultery and bastardy—and in the textual sense—such as the difficulty authorities had in monitoring and regulating rapidly produced printed matter. Hermione's restoration in the statue scene (V.iii) represents a triumph, the critic concludes, of live theater over the court's desire to regulate the printing press and paternal legitimacy.

This is a free excerpt of 107 words. There are 10,883 words (approx. 36 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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The Winter's Tale: Critical Essay by Aaron Kitch from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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