Skip to product information
1 of 1

A Defence of Pretence

Regular price $32.00
Sale price $32.00 Regular price $32.00
Sale Sold out
How the drama of Shakespeare’s time demonstrates the tensions within civilityIs civility merely a matter of reinforcing status and excluding others? Or is it a lubricant in a polarised world, enabl...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 02 December 2025
View Product Details

How the drama of Shakespeare’s time demonstrates the tensions within civility

Is civility merely a matter of reinforcing status and excluding others? Or is it a lubricant in a polarised world, enabling us to overcome tribal loyalties and cooperate for the common good? In A Defence of Pretence, Indira Ghose argues that it is both. Ghose turns to the drama of Shakespeare’s time to explore the notion of civility. The theatre, she suggests, was a laboratory where many of the era’s conflicts played out. The plays test the precepts found in treatises on civility and show that, in the complexity and confusion of human life, moral purity is an illusion. We are always playing roles. In these plays, as in social life, pretence is inescapable. Could it be a virtue?

Civility, Ghose finds, is radically ambiguous. The plays of Shakespeare, Jonson and Middleton, grappling with dissimulation, lies and social performance, question the idea of a clear-cut boundary between sincerity and dissembling, between truth and lies. What is decisive is the use to which our play-acting is put. A pretence of mutual respect might serve an ethical end: to foster a sense of common purpose. In life, as in drama, the concept of the common good might be a fiction, but one that is crucial for human society.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $32.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Publication Date: 02 December 2025
ISBN: 9780691269986
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Literary studies: c 1400 to c 1600, LITERARY CRITICISM / Renaissance, LITERARY CRITICISM / Drama, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Tudor & Elizabethan Era (1485-1603), HISTORY / Social History, Literary studies: plays and playwrights, European history: Renaissance, Social and cultural history

"It’s always a great pleasure when you discover that what might seem at first sight like a rather esoteric piece of academic research turns out to have immediate, contemporary significance. . . . Politicians of all stripes might benefit from putting a copy on their reading pile."---Terry Potter, Letterpress Project
Indira Ghose is emeritus professor of English at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland. She is the author of Women Travellers in Colonial India, Shakespeare and Laughter: A Cultural History, Much Ado About Nothing: Language and Writing and Shakespeare in Jest.