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Richard III
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 132

Richard III

Act by act, scene by scene, each Shakespeare Explained guide creates a total immersion experience in the plot development, characters, and language of the specific play.

Repositioning Shakespeare
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 237

Repositioning Shakespeare

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-01-11
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Repositioning Shakespeare offers an original assessment of a broad range of texts and cultural events that appropriate Shakespeare. Examining these materials within the context of 'the nation' in a postcolonial era, Thomas Cartelli considers: * essays by Walt Whitman * the nineteenth-century play, 'Jack Cade' * novels by Aphra Behn, Ngugi Wa Thiong'o, Michelle Cliff, Tayeb Salih, Nadine Gordimer and Robert Stone * the 1849 Astor Place Riot Cartelli places particular emphasis on redefining the 'postcolonial' in order to find a place for America. In doing so, Repositioning Shakespeare makes a considerable contribution to the continuing debate about the uses we make of Shakespeare.

ADE Bulletin
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 164

ADE Bulletin

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1999
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Shakespeare's History Plays: Rethinking Historicism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 249

Shakespeare's History Plays: Rethinking Historicism

Boldly moves criticism of Shakespeare's history plays beyond anti-humanist theoretical approaches. This important intervention in the critical and theoretical discourse of Shakespeare studies summarises, evaluates and ultimately calls time on the mode of criticism that has prevailed in Shakespeare studies over the past thirty years. It heralds a new, more dynamic way of reading Shakespeare as a supremely intelligent and creative political thinker, whose history plays address and illuminate the very questions with which cultural historicists have been so preoccupied since the 1980s. The book reignites old debates and re-energises recent bids to humanise Shakespeare and to restore agency to the individual in the critical readings of his plays.

Shakespeare, Spectatorship and the Technologies of Performance
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 259

Shakespeare, Spectatorship and the Technologies of Performance

Examining how technological developments in performance practices affect spectator experience of Shakespeare and early modern drama.

Shakespeare in America: An Anthology from the Revolution to Now (LOA #251)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 624

Shakespeare in America: An Anthology from the Revolution to Now (LOA #251)

An anthology that traces how Shakespeare has shaped American history and culture—featuring pieces by Founding Fathers, Orson Welles, and other noteworthy figures “The history of Shakespeare in America,” writes James Shapiro in his introduction to this groundbreaking anthology, “is also the history of America itself.” Shakespeare was a central, inescapable part of America’s literary inheritance, and a prism through which crucial American issues—revolution, slavery, war, social justice—were refracted and understood. In tracing the many surprising forms this influence took, Shapiro draws on many genres—poetry, fiction, essays, plays, memoirs, songs, speeches, letters, movie re...

Shakespeare, Man of the Theater
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

Shakespeare, Man of the Theater

This volume presents a sampling of the more than 250 papers presented at the Congress of the ISA held at Stratford-upon-Avon in August 1981. Most of the papers are concerned with Shakespeare as a writer for the theater. Other essays deal with Shakespeare as a literary, rather than theatrical, writer. Several of the offerings cover subjects usually neglected, and develop fresh insight into his work.

Ben Jonson and Envy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 243

Ben Jonson and Envy

This book examines the centrality of envy in the works of Ben Jonson, Shakespeare's greatest literary rival.

Shakespeare’s Serial Returns in Complex TV
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 272

Shakespeare’s Serial Returns in Complex TV

This book examines how Shakespeare’s plays resurface in current complex TV series. Its four case studies bring together The Tempest and the science fiction-Western Westworld, King Lear and the satirical dynastic drama of Succession, Hamlet and the legal thriller Black Earth Rising, as well as Coriolanus and the political thriller Homeland. The comparative readings ask what new insights the twenty-first-century remediations may grant us into Shakespeare’s texts and, vice versa, how Shakespearean returns help us understand topical concerns negotiated in the series, such as artificial intelligence, the safeguarding of democracy, terrorism, and postcolonial justice. This study also proposes that the dramaturgical seriality typical of complex TV allows insights into the seriality Shakespeare employed in structuring his plays. Discussing a broad spectrum of adaptational constellations and establishing key characteristics of the new adaptational aggregate of serial Shakespeare, it seeks to initiate a dialogue between Shakespeare studies, adaptation studies, and TV studies.

Shakespeare's World of Words
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 302

Shakespeare's World of Words

This book argues that the language Shakespeare created was made not by coining new words but rather by orchestrating existing social, literary, and theatrical vocabularies.