Much ado about numbers

£16.99

What’s the connection between Shakespeare and maths? A lot, as it turns out! Shakespeare grew up in a time of remarkable mathematical innovation. From astronomy to probability, music to multiplication, new mathematical ideas were taking off – and much of this was reflected in his work. In this book, Rob Eastaway explores the surprising and entertaining ways that maths and numbers crop up in Shakespeare’s plays.

Out of stock

Description

“A spectacular journey… Highly recommended!” Dr Simon Smith, The Shakespeare Institute “A fascinating and hugely entertaining guide to Shakespearean mathematics.” Prof Sarah Hart, author of Once Upon A Prime”A playful and engaging book … bound to excite the appetite of all Shakespeare junkies.” Patrick Spottiswoode, Founder, Shakespeare’s Globe Education’Instead of cleaving maths and English in twain, Eastaway brings them together to surprise and delight the reader.’ Dr Rebecca Fisher, The English Association A fascinating new take on the world of Shakespeare.What’s the connection between Shakespeare and maths? A lot, as it turns out!Shakespeare grew up in a time of remarkable mathematical innovation. From astronomy to probability, music to multiplication, new mathematical ideas were taking off – and much of this was reflected in his work. In this highly engaging book, award-winning author Rob Eastaway explores the surprising and entertaining ways that maths and numbers crop up in Shakespeare’s plays.Find out how Tudors multiplied, why Shakespeare never ended a line with the word orange, and why dice-playing was a serious hazard for the unwary. With historical asides about games, optics, astronomy, music and magic, you will never think about maths, history or Shakespeare the same way again.

Additional information

Weight 381 g
Dimensions 22.4 × 14.3 × 2.4 cm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Hardback

Pages

224

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

822.33 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K

Read more