Revisiting Shakespeare's Italian Resources
Memory and Reuse
Herausgeber: Bigliazzi, Silvia
Revisiting Shakespeare's Italian Resources
Memory and Reuse
Herausgeber: Bigliazzi, Silvia
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With its thirteen essays, spanning different types of Italian 'resources', from novellas to dramas, scenarios and dialogues, the book aims at offering a wide-ranging array of topics that foregrounds a more complex dynamics of circulation and rearticulation of Italian 'resources' than so far known.
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With its thirteen essays, spanning different types of Italian 'resources', from novellas to dramas, scenarios and dialogues, the book aims at offering a wide-ranging array of topics that foregrounds a more complex dynamics of circulation and rearticulation of Italian 'resources' than so far known.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 344
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Juli 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 650g
- ISBN-13: 9781032294445
- ISBN-10: 1032294442
- Artikelnr.: 70150255
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 344
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Juli 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 650g
- ISBN-13: 9781032294445
- ISBN-10: 1032294442
- Artikelnr.: 70150255
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Silvia Bigliazzi is Professor of English Literature at Verona University, where she is the Director of the Skenè Research Centre for drama and theatre studies. Her Shakespearean publications include monographs on Hamlet (Oltre il genere. Amleto tra scena e racconto, 2001) and the experience of non-being (Nel prisma del nulla. L'esperienza del nonessere nella drammaturgia shakespeariana, 2005), as well as the co-edition of miscellanies on theatre translation (Theatre Translation in Performance, Routledge 2013), Revisiting The Tempest: The Capacity to Signify (2014), Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, and Civic Life: The Boundaries of Civic Space, 2016), and Shakespeare and Crisis (2020). In 2019 she published Julius Caesar 1935: Shakespeare and Censorship in Fascist Italy. She is the co-general editor of Skenè. JTDS, as well as of the Global Shakespeare Inverted series. She has translated into Italian Romeo and Juliet (2012) and Shakespeare's sonnets (2023), and has received several fellowships from New York University, Cambridge, and Oxford (All Souls). She is a co-founder of the Verona Shakespeare Fringe Festival.
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
INTRODUCTION
Silvia Bigliazzi
PARTE ONE: MEMORIES
1. "Memory, Intertextuality/Interdiscursivity and Reuse"
Savina Stevanato
2. "Whose Memory? From the "Rossignuol" to Female Communities in Groto and
Shakespeare"
Silvia Bigliazzi
PART TWO: MEMORY AND REUSE
3. Welcome to Padua: Female Characters, Narrative Sources, and the Commedia
dell'Arte in The Two Gentlemen of Verona
Melissa Walter
4. The Source as a Resonant Halo. Italian Neoplatonism in Twelfth Night
Rocco Coronato
5. Bandello's Novellas and The Merry Wives of Windsor
Roberta Zanoni
6. "Ed ebbono bene e buona ventura." Multi-Layered Echoes of Il Pecorone
in The Merchant of Venice
Alessandra Squeo
7. Boccaccio's Bernabò, Shakespeare's Cymbeline, and Other Resources: A
Keyword and Co-textual Analysis
Fabio Ciambella
PART THREE: REUSE AND MEMORY
8 "What country, friends, is this?": Displaced Identity and Homoerotic
Desire in Twelfth Night and its Italian Models
Jason Lawrence
9. "The story that is printed in her blood": Patriarchal Authority in Much
Ado About Nothing and Its Sources
Emanuel Stelzer
10. "Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak": Female Agency from
Cinthio to Shakespeare's Measure for Measure
Cristiano Ragni
11. Reviving Past "Models": Dolce's Marianna and the Intricacies of
Othello's Crux
Beatrice Righetti
12. "As I please myself." Recollections and Reconfigurations of Female
Agency in Ariosto's Suppositi, Gascoigne's Supposes and Shakespeare's The
Taming of the Shrew
Silvia Silvestri
13. The Ring is the Thing: All's Well That Ends Well and its Mobile
Circuitry
Eric Nicholson
AFTERWORD
Robert Henke
Index
List of Contributors
INTRODUCTION
Silvia Bigliazzi
PARTE ONE: MEMORIES
1. "Memory, Intertextuality/Interdiscursivity and Reuse"
Savina Stevanato
2. "Whose Memory? From the "Rossignuol" to Female Communities in Groto and
Shakespeare"
Silvia Bigliazzi
PART TWO: MEMORY AND REUSE
3. Welcome to Padua: Female Characters, Narrative Sources, and the Commedia
dell'Arte in The Two Gentlemen of Verona
Melissa Walter
4. The Source as a Resonant Halo. Italian Neoplatonism in Twelfth Night
Rocco Coronato
5. Bandello's Novellas and The Merry Wives of Windsor
Roberta Zanoni
6. "Ed ebbono bene e buona ventura." Multi-Layered Echoes of Il Pecorone
in The Merchant of Venice
Alessandra Squeo
7. Boccaccio's Bernabò, Shakespeare's Cymbeline, and Other Resources: A
Keyword and Co-textual Analysis
Fabio Ciambella
PART THREE: REUSE AND MEMORY
8 "What country, friends, is this?": Displaced Identity and Homoerotic
Desire in Twelfth Night and its Italian Models
Jason Lawrence
9. "The story that is printed in her blood": Patriarchal Authority in Much
Ado About Nothing and Its Sources
Emanuel Stelzer
10. "Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak": Female Agency from
Cinthio to Shakespeare's Measure for Measure
Cristiano Ragni
11. Reviving Past "Models": Dolce's Marianna and the Intricacies of
Othello's Crux
Beatrice Righetti
12. "As I please myself." Recollections and Reconfigurations of Female
Agency in Ariosto's Suppositi, Gascoigne's Supposes and Shakespeare's The
Taming of the Shrew
Silvia Silvestri
13. The Ring is the Thing: All's Well That Ends Well and its Mobile
Circuitry
Eric Nicholson
AFTERWORD
Robert Henke
Index
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
INTRODUCTION
Silvia Bigliazzi
PARTE ONE: MEMORIES
1. "Memory, Intertextuality/Interdiscursivity and Reuse"
Savina Stevanato
2. "Whose Memory? From the "Rossignuol" to Female Communities in Groto and
Shakespeare"
Silvia Bigliazzi
PART TWO: MEMORY AND REUSE
3. Welcome to Padua: Female Characters, Narrative Sources, and the Commedia
dell'Arte in The Two Gentlemen of Verona
Melissa Walter
4. The Source as a Resonant Halo. Italian Neoplatonism in Twelfth Night
Rocco Coronato
5. Bandello's Novellas and The Merry Wives of Windsor
Roberta Zanoni
6. "Ed ebbono bene e buona ventura." Multi-Layered Echoes of Il Pecorone
in The Merchant of Venice
Alessandra Squeo
7. Boccaccio's Bernabò, Shakespeare's Cymbeline, and Other Resources: A
Keyword and Co-textual Analysis
Fabio Ciambella
PART THREE: REUSE AND MEMORY
8 "What country, friends, is this?": Displaced Identity and Homoerotic
Desire in Twelfth Night and its Italian Models
Jason Lawrence
9. "The story that is printed in her blood": Patriarchal Authority in Much
Ado About Nothing and Its Sources
Emanuel Stelzer
10. "Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak": Female Agency from
Cinthio to Shakespeare's Measure for Measure
Cristiano Ragni
11. Reviving Past "Models": Dolce's Marianna and the Intricacies of
Othello's Crux
Beatrice Righetti
12. "As I please myself." Recollections and Reconfigurations of Female
Agency in Ariosto's Suppositi, Gascoigne's Supposes and Shakespeare's The
Taming of the Shrew
Silvia Silvestri
13. The Ring is the Thing: All's Well That Ends Well and its Mobile
Circuitry
Eric Nicholson
AFTERWORD
Robert Henke
Index
List of Contributors
INTRODUCTION
Silvia Bigliazzi
PARTE ONE: MEMORIES
1. "Memory, Intertextuality/Interdiscursivity and Reuse"
Savina Stevanato
2. "Whose Memory? From the "Rossignuol" to Female Communities in Groto and
Shakespeare"
Silvia Bigliazzi
PART TWO: MEMORY AND REUSE
3. Welcome to Padua: Female Characters, Narrative Sources, and the Commedia
dell'Arte in The Two Gentlemen of Verona
Melissa Walter
4. The Source as a Resonant Halo. Italian Neoplatonism in Twelfth Night
Rocco Coronato
5. Bandello's Novellas and The Merry Wives of Windsor
Roberta Zanoni
6. "Ed ebbono bene e buona ventura." Multi-Layered Echoes of Il Pecorone
in The Merchant of Venice
Alessandra Squeo
7. Boccaccio's Bernabò, Shakespeare's Cymbeline, and Other Resources: A
Keyword and Co-textual Analysis
Fabio Ciambella
PART THREE: REUSE AND MEMORY
8 "What country, friends, is this?": Displaced Identity and Homoerotic
Desire in Twelfth Night and its Italian Models
Jason Lawrence
9. "The story that is printed in her blood": Patriarchal Authority in Much
Ado About Nothing and Its Sources
Emanuel Stelzer
10. "Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak": Female Agency from
Cinthio to Shakespeare's Measure for Measure
Cristiano Ragni
11. Reviving Past "Models": Dolce's Marianna and the Intricacies of
Othello's Crux
Beatrice Righetti
12. "As I please myself." Recollections and Reconfigurations of Female
Agency in Ariosto's Suppositi, Gascoigne's Supposes and Shakespeare's The
Taming of the Shrew
Silvia Silvestri
13. The Ring is the Thing: All's Well That Ends Well and its Mobile
Circuitry
Eric Nicholson
AFTERWORD
Robert Henke
Index