Shakespeare's Sonnets both generate and demonstrate many of today's most pressing debates about Shakespeare and poetry. They explore history and aesthetics, gender and society, time and memory, and continue to invite divergent responses from critics and poets. This freeze-frame volume showcases the range of current debate and ideas surrounding these still startling poems. Each chapter has been carefully selected for its originality and relevance to the needs of students, teachers, and researchers. Key themes and topics covered include:
Textual issues and editing the sonnets
Reception, interpretation and critical history of the sonnets
The place of the sonnets in teaching
Critical approaches and close reading
Memorialisation and monument-making
Contemporary poetry and the Sonnets
All the essays offer new perspectives and combine to give readers an up-to-date understanding of what is exciting and challenging about Shakespeare's Sonnets. The approach, based on an individual poetic form, reflects how the sonnets are most commonly studied and taught.
Overall, the collection contains some first-rate scholarship by established researchers and as a snapshot of current work, demonstrates that Shakespeare's sonnets continue to elicit dynamic literary criticis. [...] the stylistic attentiveness of the volume, and the concern with the sonnets' relations with other texts and genres, means that the collection will be of interest to scholars and students not only of Shakespeare and Renaissance literature but also of poetic form and language across periods.