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Shakespeare/Adaptation/Modern Drama: Essays in Honour of Jill Levenson [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 277 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 236x160x29 mm, weight: 660 g, 11 Illustrations, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Jul-2011
  • Leidėjas: University of Toronto Press
  • ISBN-10: 1442641746
  • ISBN-13: 9781442641747
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 277 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 236x160x29 mm, weight: 660 g, 11 Illustrations, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Jul-2011
  • Leidėjas: University of Toronto Press
  • ISBN-10: 1442641746
  • ISBN-13: 9781442641747
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Shakespeare/Adaptation/Modern Drama is the first book-length international study to examine the critical and theatrical connections among these fields, including the motivations, methods, and limits of adaptation in modern performance media.



The relationship between modern drama and Shakespeare remains intense and fruitful, as Shakespearian themes continue to permeate contemporary plays, films, and other art-forms. Shakespeare/Adaptation/Modern Drama is the first book-length international study to examine the critical and theatrical connections among these fields, including the motivations, methods, and limits of adaptation in modern performance media.

Top scholars including Peter Holland, Alexander Leggatt, Brian Parker, and Stanley Wells examine such topics as the relationship between Shakespeare and modern drama in the context of current literary theories and historical accounts of adaptive and appropriative practices. Among the diverse and intriguing examples studied are the authorial self-adaptations of Tom Stoppard and Tennessee Williams, and the generic and political appropriations of Shakespeare's texts in television, musical theatre, and memoir. This illuminating and theoretically astute tribute to Renaissance and modern drama scholar Jill Levenson will stimulate further research on the evolving adaptive and intertextual relationships between influential literary works and periods.

Recenzijos

An extremely worthwhile collection of essays from distinguished group of scholars, showing the varied ways drama can be adapted and appropriated and refashioned into new genres and forms.

- Dan Venning (Shakespeare Quarterly vol 65:03:2014)

Acknowledgments vii
Notes on Contributors ix
Introduction 3(22)
Randall Martin
Katherine Scheil
PART I Shakespeare and Modern Drama
1 Unwinding Coriolanus: Osborne, Grass, and Brecht
25(23)
Peter Holland
2 Three Men in a Boat: Stoppard, Beckett, and the Ghost of Arnold Geulincx
48(8)
Hersh Zeifman
3 West Side Story and the Vestiges of Theatrical Liberalism
56(20)
Andrea Most
4 Staging Shakespeare for `Live' Performance in The Eyre Affair and Stage Beauty
76(17)
Margaret Jane Kidnie
5 Macbeth and Modern Politics
93(17)
John H. Astington
6 Shakespeare as Memoir
110(15)
Katherine Scheil
7 `Bold, but Seemingly Marketable': The 2007 Stratford Ontario Merchant
125(20)
Robert Ormsby
PART II Shakespeare
8 `To gain the language, `tis needful that the most immodest word be looked upon and learnt': Editing the Bawdy in Henry IV, Part Two
145(21)
James C. Bulman
9 Extremes of Passion
166(17)
Stanley Wells
10 Shakespeare and the Indifference of Nature
183(15)
Alexander Leggatt
11 Pauline Cartography, Missionary Nationalism, and The Tempest
198(20)
Randall Martin
12 Lear's Conversation with the Philosopher
218(17)
Hanna Scolnicov
PART III Modern Drama
13 An Experiment in Teaching: Pygmalion, My Fair Lady, and the Pursuit of Happiness
235(22)
Alan Ackerman
14 `The Going to Pieces of T. Lawrence Shannon': Notes on Tennessee Williams's Drafts of The Night of the Iguana (1961)
257(19)
Brian Parker
15 `How do you play this game?': Nonsensical Language Games in Shaw, Coward, and Pinter
276
Rebecca S. Cameron
Afterword: A Tapestry of Thanks: Reflections on the Work of Jill L. Levenson
Jane Freeman
Jill L. Levenson's Publications 294(17)
Index 311
Randall Martin is a professor in the Department of English at the University of New Brunswick.

Katherine Scheil is an associate professor in the Department of English at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.