Book Description
Wilder examines the excessive remembering of figures such as Romeo, Falstaff, and Hamlet as a way of defining Shakespeare's theatricality.
Author : Lina Perkins Wilder
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 231 pages
File Size : 32,58 MB
Release : 2010-11-04
Category : Drama
ISBN : 0521764556
Wilder examines the excessive remembering of figures such as Romeo, Falstaff, and Hamlet as a way of defining Shakespeare's theatricality.
Author : Lina Perkins Wilder
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 44,12 MB
Release : 2018
Category : Memory in literature
ISBN : 9781138816763
The Routledge Handbook of Shakespeare and Memory introduces this vibrant field of study to students and scholars, whilst defining and extending critical debates in the area. Mapping memory in key areas of Shakespeare studies, the volume then goes on to look at the role of memory in individual plays.
Author : Hester Lees-Jeffries
Publisher : OUP Oxford
Page : 256 pages
File Size : 48,51 MB
Release : 2013-08-22
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 019165597X
Hamlet's father's Ghost asks his son to 'Remember me!', but how did people remember around 1600? And how do we remember now? Shakespeare and Memory brings together classical and early modern sources, theatre history, performance, material culture, and cognitive psychology and neuroscience in order to explore ideas about memory in Shakespeare's plays and poems. It argues that, when Shakespeare was writing, ideas about memory were undergoing a kind of crisis, as both the technologies of memory (print, the theatre itself) and the belief structures underpinning ideas about memory underwent rapid change. And it suggests that this crisis might be mirrored in our own time, when, despite all the increasing gadgetry at our disposal, memory can still be recovered, falsified, corrupted, or wiped: only we ourselves can remember, but the workings of memory remain mysterious. Shakespeare and Memory draws on works from all stages of Shakespeare's career, with a particular focus on Hamlet, the Sonnets, Twelfth Night, and The Winter's Tale. It considers some little things: what's Hamlet writing on? And why does Orsino think he smells violets? And it asks some big questions: how should the dead be remembered? What's the relationship between memory and identity? And is it art, above all, that enables love and beauty, memory and identity, to endure in the face of loss, time, and death?
Author : Garrett A. Sullivan
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 13,56 MB
Release : 2005-09-29
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780521848428
Publisher description
Author : Peter Holland
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 326 pages
File Size : 19,16 MB
Release : 2006-11-02
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0521863805
This collection by leading Shakespeare scholars, first published in 2006, brings together memory and performance.
Author : Irena Makaryk
Publisher : University of Toronto Press
Page : 353 pages
File Size : 20,11 MB
Release : 2012-09-18
Category : Drama
ISBN : 1442698381
Shakespeare’s works occupy a prismatic and complex position in world culture: they straddle both the high and the low, the national and the foreign, literature and theatre. The Second World War presents a fascinating case study of this phenomenon: most, if not all, of its combatants have laid claim to Shakespeare and have called upon his work to convey their society’s self-image. In wartime, such claims frequently brought to the fore a crisis of cultural identity and of competing ownership of this ‘universal’ author. Despite this, the role of Shakespeare during the Second World War has not yet been examined or documented in any depth. Shakespeare and the Second World War provides the first sustained international, collaborative incursion into this terrain. The essays demonstrate how the wide variety of ways in which Shakespeare has been recycled, reviewed, and reinterpreted from 1939–1945 are both illuminated by and continue to illuminate the War today.
Author : A. Favorini
Publisher : Springer
Page : 329 pages
File Size : 35,22 MB
Release : 2008-12-08
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 0230617166
This innovative study examines the role of memory in the history of theatre and drama. Favorini analyzes issues of memory in self-construction, collective memory, the clash of memory and history and even explores what the work of cognitive scientists can teach us about brain function and our response to drama.
Author : Isabel Karremann
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 223 pages
File Size : 20,42 MB
Release : 2015-10-20
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1107117585
This book sheds new light on the dramatic devices Shakespeare developed for turning history into theatre in his history plays.
Author : Joyce Green MacDonald
Publisher : Springer Nature
Page : 183 pages
File Size : 13,78 MB
Release : 2020-08-24
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 3030506800
As readers head into the second fifty years of the modern critical study of blackness and black characters in Renaissance drama, it has become a critical commonplace to note black female characters’ almost complete absence from Shakespeare’s plays. Despite this physical absence, however, they still play central symbolic roles in articulating definitions of love, beauty, chastity, femininity, and civic and social standing, invoked as the opposite and foil of women who are “fair”. Beginning from this recognition of black women’s simultaneous physical absence and imaginative presence, this book argues that modern Shakespearean adaptation is a primary means for materializing black women’s often elusive presence in the plays, serving as a vital staging place for historical and political inquiry into racial formation in Shakespeare’s world, and our own. Ranging geographically across North America and the Caribbean, and including film and fiction as well as drama as it discusses remade versions of Othello, Romeo and Juliet, Antony and Cleopatra, and The Taming of the Shrew, Shakespearean Adaptation, Race, and Memory in the New World will attract scholars of early modern race studies, gender and performance, and women in Renaissance drama.
Author : Kurt A. Schreyer
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Page : 339 pages
File Size : 45,89 MB
Release : 2014-08-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 080145509X
In Shakespeare's Medieval Craft, Kurt A. Schreyer explores the relationship between Shakespeare’s plays and a tradition of late medieval English biblical drama known as mystery plays. Scholars of English theater have long debated Shakespeare’s connection to the mystery play tradition, but Schreyer provides new perspective on the subject by focusing on the Chester Banns, a sixteenth-century proclamation announcing the annual performance of that city’s cycle of mystery plays. Through close study of the Banns, Schreyer demonstrates the central importance of medieval stage objects—as vital and direct agents and not merely as precursors—to the Shakespearean stage.As Schreyer shows, the Chester Banns serve as a paradigm for how Shakespeare’s theater might have reflected on and incorporated the mystery play tradition, yet distinguished itself from it. For instance, he demonstrates that certain material features of Shakespeare’s stage—including the ass’s head of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, the theatrical space of Purgatory in Hamlet, and the knocking at the gate in the Porter scene of Macbeth—were in fact remnants of the earlier mysteries transformed to meet the exigencies of the commercial London playhouses. Schreyer argues that the ongoing agency of supposedly superseded theatrical objects and practices reveal how the mystery plays shaped dramatic production long after their demise. At the same time, these medieval traditions help to reposition Shakespeare as more than a writer of plays; he was a play-wright, a dramatic artisan who forged new theatrical works by fitting poetry to the material remnants of an older dramatic tradition.