The hollow crown : Shakespeare on how leaders rise, rule, and fall / Eliot A. Cohen.
Material type:
- 9781541644861

Item type | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | Course Reserve | Main Library | 822.33 CO-H (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan (Restricted Access) | 155454 | ||
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | Textbooks | Main Library | 822.33 CO-H (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 155455 | ||
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | Textbooks | Main Library | 822.33 CO-H (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 155456 |
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813.54 LO-Z Zami : a new spelling of my name : a biomythography / | 813.5409355 NG-S The sympathizer / | 821.8 YE-S W. B. Yeats : selected poems / | 822.33 CO-H The hollow crown : Shakespeare on how leaders rise, rule, and fall / | 823 CO-D Disgrace / | 823 SE-F Funny boy / | 823 WO-M Mrs Dalloway |
"More so than any politician or philosopher, it is William Shakespeare who can teach us about power. What it is, what it means, how it is gained, used, and lost. From the princes and kings of Henry IV to the scheming senators of Julius Caesar, politics fills his plays: brutal cunning, Machiavellian manipulation, fatal overreach, even the rare possibility of redemption. And it is these enduring narratives that can teach us how power plays out to this day. In The Hollow Crown, military scholar Eliot A. Cohen decodes Shakespeare's understanding of politics as theater, shedding light on how businesses, corporations, and governments work in the modern world. The White House, after all, is a court, with intrigues and rivalries just as Shakespeare described, as is an army, a department of state, or even a university. And, besides their settings, what most of all defines these various dramas are their characters, in all their ambition, cruelty, hope, and humanity. Cohen looks to the inspiring speeches of Henry V to better understand John F. Kennedy, to Richard III's darkness to plumb Adolf Hitler's psychology, and to Prospero from The Tempest for a window into George Washington's graceful abdication of power. Ultimately, through Cohen's incisive gaze, Shakespeare's work becomes a skeleton key into the lives of the leaders who, for good or ill, have made and remade our world"--
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