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A Companion to Shakespeare and Performance
Barbara Hodgdon (Editor), W. B. Worthen (Editor)
ISBN: 978-1-4051-1104-1
Hardcover
704 pages
March 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
US $175.95 Add to Cart

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  • Description
  • Table of Contents
  • Author Information
  • Reviews
List of Illustrations.

Notes on Contributors.

Acknowledgments.

Introduction: A Kind of History: Barbara Hodgdon (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor).

Part I: Overviews: Terms of Performance.

1. Reconstructing Love: King Lear and Theatre Architecture: Peggy Phelan(Stanford University).

2. Shakespeare's Two Bodies: Peter Holland (University of Notre Dame).

3. Ragging Twelfth Night 1602, 1996, 2002-3: Bruce R. Smith (University of Southern California).

4. On Location: Robert Shaughnessy (University of Kent).

5. Where is Hamlet? Text, Performance, and Adaptation: Margaret Jane Kidnie (University of Western Ontario).

6. Shakespeare and the Possibilities of Postcolonial Performance: Ania Loomba (University of Pennsylvania).

Part II: Materialities: Writing and Performance.

7. The Imaginary Text, or, The Curse of the Folio: Anthony B. Dawson (University of British Columbia).

8. Shakespeare Screen/Play: Laurie E. Osborne (Colby College).

9. What does the Cued Part Cue? Parts and Cues in Romeo and Juliet: Simon Palfrey (University of Liverpool) and Tiffany Stern (author).

10. Editors in Love? Performing Desire in Romeo and Juliet: Wendy Wall (Northwestern University).

11. Prefixing the Author: Print, Plays, and Performance: W. B. Worthen (Barnard College, Columbia University).

Part III: Histories.

12. Shakespeare the Victorian: Richard Schoch (University of London).

13. Shakespeare Goes Slumming: Harlem '37 and Birmingham '97: Kathleen McLuskie (Shakespeare Institute, Stratford upon Avon).

14. Stanislavski, Othello, and the Motives of Eloquence: John Gillies (University of Essex).

15. Shakespeare, Henry VI, and the Festival of Britain: Stuart Hampton-Reeves (University of Central Lancashire).

16. Encoding/Decoding Shakespeare: Richard III at the 2002 Stratford Festival: Ric Knowles (University of Guelph).

17. Performance as Deflection: Miriam Gilbert (University of Iowa).

18. Maverick Shakespeare: Carol Chillington Rutter (University of Warwick).

19. Inheriting the Globe: The Reception of Shakespearian Space and Audience in Contemporary Reviewing: Paul Prescott (University of Warwick).

20. Performing History: Henry IV, Money, and the Fashion of the Times: Diana E. Henderson (MIT).

Part IV: Performance Technologies, Cultural Technologies.

21. "Are We Being Theatrical Yet?": Actors, Editors, and the Possibilities of Dialogue: Michael Cordner (University of York).

22. Shakespeare on the Record: Douglas Lanier (University of New Hampshire).

23. Sshockspeare: (Nazi) Shakespeare Goes Heil-lywood: Richard Burt (University of Florida).

24. Game Space/Tragic Space: Julie Taymor's Titus: Peter S. Donaldson (MIT).

25. Shakespeare Stiles Style: Shakespeare, Julia Stiles, and American Girl Culture: Elizabeth A. Deitchman (University of California).

26. Shakespeare on Vacation: Susan Bennett (University of Calgary).

Part V: Identities of Performance.

27. Visions of Color: Spectacle, Spectators, and the Performance of Race: Margo Hendricks (University of California, Santa Cruz).

28. Shakespeare and the Fiction of the Intercultural: Yong Li Lan.

29. Guying the Guys and Girling The Shrew: (Post)Feminist Fun at Shakespeare's Globe: G. B. Shand (York University, Canada).

30. Queering the Audience: All-Male Casts in Recent Shakespeare Productions: James C. Bulman (Allegheny College).

31. A Thousand Shakespeares: From Cinematic Saga to Feminist Geography; or, The Escape from Iceland: Courtney Lehmann (University of the Pacific).

32. Conflicting Fields of Vision: Performing Self and Other in Two Intercultural Shakespeare Productions: Joanne Tompkins (University of Queensland).

Part VI: Performing Pedagogies.

33. Teaching through Performance: James N. Loehlin (University of Texas, Austin).

34. "The eye of man hath not heard,/The ear of man hath not seen": Teaching Tools for Speaking Shakespeare: Peter Lichtenfels (University of California, Davis).

Index