This richly annotated edition takes a fresh look at the first part of Shakespeare\'s second tetralogy of history plays, showing how it relates to the other plays in the sequence.
This edition also reconsi.
Forker places the play in its political context, discussing its relation to competing theories of monarchy, looKing at how it faced censorship because of possible comparisons between Richard II and Elizabeth I, and how Bolingbroke\'s rebellion could be compared to the Essex rising of the time.
This richly annotated edition takes a fresh look at the first part of Shakespeare\'s second tetralogy of history plays, showing how it relates to the other plays in the sequence