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The Portable Shakespeare

William Shakespeare Stephen Orgel

$49.99

Paperback

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English
Penguin
30 June 2005
William Shakespeareas plays revolutionized the English language and created some of the most important scenes in Western literature: Hamlet contemplating his mortality, Romeo romancing Juliet, Lear railing against his insanity into the storm, and King Henry V wandering among his soldiers on the eve of battle. With introductions and context from leading Shakes-pearean scholar Stephen Orgel - the Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Humanities at Stanford and the co–General Editor of the Pelican Shakespeare series - the essential works of the most important figure in English literature are collected here: nine complete plays, the most popular scenes and poems, as well as a glossary of 1,000 key words. With clear and authoritative texts from the Pelican Shakespeare series, this user-friendly edition will inspire students, thespians, poets, and general readers alike.
By:  
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Penguin
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   Reprinted edition
Dimensions:   Height: 196mm,  Width: 132mm,  Spine: 42mm
Weight:   449g
ISBN:   9780142437940
ISBN 10:   0142437948
Pages:   584
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. Introduction; 2. A theory of positive presidential power; 3. Case study: pushing President Bush's 2001 tax cut; 4. Winning key votes, 1953-2004; 5. Signing new laws, 1953-2004; 6. The practice and potential of presidential leadership; Appendix: archival study technical details.

Reviews for The Portable Shakespeare

Pushing the Agenda breaks new ground in studying 'positive' presidential power. The argument is compelling, the case studies illuminating, and the systematic data and empirical analyses eye-opening. This is a must-read book for all presidential scholars and one of the best books on the presidency in years. It has changed the way I think about presidential-congressional relations. - Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University For a long time, we have known that important elements of presidential power express themselves through bargaining, negotiating, and lobbying. In this timely book, though, Matthew Beckmann goes beyond the fact of this occurrence in order to scrutinize its character. Beckmann presents altogether new findings on whom presidents target within Congress and, suggestively, with what effect. This book is sure to be a standard citation in the empirical literatures on executive-legislative relations. - William Howell, University of Chicago Quantitative studies of presidential-congressional relations over the past two decades have thoroughly established just how significantly the larger context limits the scope of individual presidential sway in the legislature. They have been far less effective, however, at systematically evaluating what presidents are able to accomplish with their margin of influence. Until now. Matthew Beckmann's Pushing the Agenda pushes our understanding of presidential agency to new heights. Creatively blending simple formal modeling with a rich array of empirical measures, and combing close examination of the single case of the 2001 Bush tax cuts with expansive multivariate analyses of the impact on key votes and new laws of ten chief executives from Eisenhower to Bush 43, Beckmann persuasively reveals how presidents can and do exploit early-game agenda setting and endgame vote lobbying to increase substantially their odds of success in shaping legislative policy making. - Mark A. Peterson, Professor of Public Policy and Political Science, UCLA School of Public Affairs A critical part of the new generation of presidency research, Matthew Beckmann's Pushing the Agenda takes complex formal and informal theories seriously and then asks, 'is this really how presidential influence works?' His distinction between endgame, where votes matter most, and 'earlygame,' where cooperation over agendas matters most, constitutes an original theoretic as well as empirical contribution that academics in every setting will begin to take up in their own research. His analysis of presidential 'influence' within these two contexts breathes new life into a traditional concept rendered moribund by two decades of identification with measures of 'voting success' by demonstrating that when agendas matter and when votes matter, presidents matter and not at the margins either, but at the core. This book represents a foundation on which to construct a new generation of understanding and relevancy for presidency research. - Terry Sullivan, Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Matthew Beckmann's Pushing the Agenda: Presidential Leadership in U.S. Lawmaking, 1953-2004 is a major contribution to our knowledge about presidential legislative power. He uses rich and innovative quantitative and qualitative analysis of the last half-century's presidential-congressional interactions to explain presidential power on the Hill. His well-written and unique analysis focuses on presidential strategies and successes and failures of presidential influence in Congress. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the presidency and Congress. - James A. Thurber, American University


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