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Original Article

Squibb Academic Lecture: Shakespeare and DSM-III

(Professor of English)
Pages 30-36 | Published online: 06 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Modern literary criticism generally rejects the idea of off-stage lives for Shakespeare's characters. All we have is behaviour — the visible behaviour of ‘Shakespeare's talking animals’. But a review of that behaviour in the light of DSM-III suggests a high degree of clinical accuracy in some of it. The depictions of Ophelia, Lear and Caius Martius Coriolanus supply examples.

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