Pages: 127 (Paperback) ISBN: 140586186X Pub: Longman Pub date: 2007-08-30 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 62889
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Reader Reviews:A Great Play - but I wouldn't choose this edition again... (1/1 people found this helpful)'Tis Pity She's a Whore is a play which centres around the incestuous love of its to protagonists - Giovanni and Anabella, brother and sister. The controversy of its topic have been much discussed since it was first performed in the 17th century, with different critics and different audiences taking to it very differently.
Jacobean at its Best (1/1 people found this helpful)I thoroughly enjoyed reading this play, my first foray into Jacobean literature. Revenge, incest, etc. this play has everything to keep you hooked. I don't as a rule read many plays (Shakespeare excepted) but I thoroughly enjoyed it, now I want to see it on stage it was so good. A brilliant play (2/3 people found this helpful)This a a brilliant and unique play which deals with a theme which many playwrights would not. It is a classic story of revenge, betrayal and love with disastrous consequences. Although it deals with the difficult theme of incest it does so in a way that by the end you do not find it as shocking as you may expect. In fact there are other much worst happenings within the plot which include murder and corruption in many different forms.
great revenge play (2/7 people found this helpful)Ignore the above review, what this reviewer and i think many people get wrong about these jacobean revenge plays is that you don't have to take the side of a paraticular character or even agree with them. This is however a brilliant play by one of my favourite writers. A disturbing play on a forbidden theme. (9/22 people found this helpful)Perhaps the most shocking of Ford's plays, 'Tis Pity She's a Whore tackles one of society's greatest taboos. The questions and issues raised are as problematic and controversial today as they were in the seventeenth century. The characters Ford create all have their own views on the subject, yet Ford gives his own backing to none. There is no character who is perfect, no-one who provides a clear, unbiased view on the topic. I found there was no single figure who possessed the moral authority and integrity to denounce Giovanni and Arabella's actions. This lack of moral focus forces the reader to form their own conclusions in this disturbing, almost dangerous play. At the same time, some characters are strangely compelling, as we struggle to understand their situation and search for clues as to how we should react. Although I disliked the theme of the play, (it was not a play I would have chosen to read had not my university course demanded it), at the same time I found some of the characters engaging my interest, even though I disagreed with their actions. This play is a disconcerting exploration of what many would assume to be a fundamental law of society, and nature. And just what is the theme of this play? I'm afraid you'll have to read it to find out - you won't be kept in the dark for long! Similar Products"High Windows" (York Notes Advanced) "Spies" (York Notes Advanced) Spies York Notes on "Wise Children" (York Notes Advanced) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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