Shakespeare and Civil Unrest in Britain and the United States
Herausgeber: Bayer, Mark; Navitsky, Joseph
Shakespeare and Civil Unrest in Britain and the United States
Herausgeber: Bayer, Mark; Navitsky, Joseph
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Shakespeare and Civil Unrest in Britain and the United States extends the growing body of scholarship on Shakespeare's appropriation by examining how the plays have been invoked during periods of extreme social, political, and racial turmoil.
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Shakespeare and Civil Unrest in Britain and the United States extends the growing body of scholarship on Shakespeare's appropriation by examining how the plays have been invoked during periods of extreme social, political, and racial turmoil.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 11mm
- Gewicht: 286g
- ISBN-13: 9780367741990
- ISBN-10: 0367741997
- Artikelnr.: 67825623
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 198
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 11mm
- Gewicht: 286g
- ISBN-13: 9780367741990
- ISBN-10: 0367741997
- Artikelnr.: 67825623
Mark Bayer is Associate Professor of English at the University of Texas at San Antonio. He is the author of Theatre, Community, and Civic Engagement in Jacobean London (2011), a finalist for the 2012 George Freedley Memorial Award. He has written extensively on the enduring cultural authority of Shakespeare's plays in contexts as diverse as nineteenth century America and the modern Middle East. Joseph Navitsky is Associate Professor of English at West Chester University. His essays on religious conflict and early modern drama have appeared in English Literary Renaissance, The International Journal of the Classical Tradition, and Texas Studies of Literature and Language, and his most recent work on American receptions of Shakespeare has appeared in the Journal of American Culture. He served as assistant director of the Shakespeare Association of American from 2013-2016.
Introduction
Shakespeare, Civil Unrest, and the Negotiation of Cultural Value (Mark
Bayer and Joseph Navitsky)
PART I -SHAKESPEARE DURING THE CIVIL WARS
Chapter 1 - Celebrity Skulls (Heidi Craig)
Chapter 2 - "I thought my blood derived a Crown to us, / But now I find it
derives only Treason": Remembering and Forgetting the civil war (Rachel
Willie)
Chapter 3 - Richard Grant White, The Civil War, and the Future of American
Shakespeare Studies (Mark Bayer)
Chapter 4 - The American Civil War and the 1864 Tercentenary of
Shakespeare's Birth (Joseph Navitsky)
Chapter 5 - Outlaw Shakespeare: Frank James and Post-Civil War Justice
(Darlena Ciraulo)
PART II - SHAKESPEARE AND DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE
Chapter 6 - Shakespeare, Cultural Production, and Class Consciousness in
Antebellum New York City: Re-examining the Astor Place Riot (Matthew
Kendrick)
Chapter 7 - "As bountiful as mines of India": Shakespeare as India and the
First War of Indian Independence, 1857-1889 (Jess Hamlet)
Chapter 8 - A Most Civil Discourse: Jacob Gordin's The Jewish King Lear
and the Jewish-American Immigrant Community (John Milam)
Chapter 9 - "The Artist Must Take Sides": Paul Robeson and Civil Unrest
(Robert Sawyer)
Chapter 10 - The $64,000 Question: What Can Frances DeBerry tell us about
Shakespeare Scholarship in Civil Rights Era America? (Jeanette Nguyen Tran)
Chapter 11 - The "cockle of rebellion": Coriolanus During the Vietnam Era
(Mary Steible)
EPILOGUE
Chapter 12 - "Sea Changes": Civil Unrest in Shakespeare Studies and Beyond
(Sharon O'Dair)
Shakespeare, Civil Unrest, and the Negotiation of Cultural Value (Mark
Bayer and Joseph Navitsky)
PART I -SHAKESPEARE DURING THE CIVIL WARS
Chapter 1 - Celebrity Skulls (Heidi Craig)
Chapter 2 - "I thought my blood derived a Crown to us, / But now I find it
derives only Treason": Remembering and Forgetting the civil war (Rachel
Willie)
Chapter 3 - Richard Grant White, The Civil War, and the Future of American
Shakespeare Studies (Mark Bayer)
Chapter 4 - The American Civil War and the 1864 Tercentenary of
Shakespeare's Birth (Joseph Navitsky)
Chapter 5 - Outlaw Shakespeare: Frank James and Post-Civil War Justice
(Darlena Ciraulo)
PART II - SHAKESPEARE AND DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE
Chapter 6 - Shakespeare, Cultural Production, and Class Consciousness in
Antebellum New York City: Re-examining the Astor Place Riot (Matthew
Kendrick)
Chapter 7 - "As bountiful as mines of India": Shakespeare as India and the
First War of Indian Independence, 1857-1889 (Jess Hamlet)
Chapter 8 - A Most Civil Discourse: Jacob Gordin's The Jewish King Lear
and the Jewish-American Immigrant Community (John Milam)
Chapter 9 - "The Artist Must Take Sides": Paul Robeson and Civil Unrest
(Robert Sawyer)
Chapter 10 - The $64,000 Question: What Can Frances DeBerry tell us about
Shakespeare Scholarship in Civil Rights Era America? (Jeanette Nguyen Tran)
Chapter 11 - The "cockle of rebellion": Coriolanus During the Vietnam Era
(Mary Steible)
EPILOGUE
Chapter 12 - "Sea Changes": Civil Unrest in Shakespeare Studies and Beyond
(Sharon O'Dair)
Introduction
Shakespeare, Civil Unrest, and the Negotiation of Cultural Value (Mark
Bayer and Joseph Navitsky)
PART I -SHAKESPEARE DURING THE CIVIL WARS
Chapter 1 - Celebrity Skulls (Heidi Craig)
Chapter 2 - "I thought my blood derived a Crown to us, / But now I find it
derives only Treason": Remembering and Forgetting the civil war (Rachel
Willie)
Chapter 3 - Richard Grant White, The Civil War, and the Future of American
Shakespeare Studies (Mark Bayer)
Chapter 4 - The American Civil War and the 1864 Tercentenary of
Shakespeare's Birth (Joseph Navitsky)
Chapter 5 - Outlaw Shakespeare: Frank James and Post-Civil War Justice
(Darlena Ciraulo)
PART II - SHAKESPEARE AND DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE
Chapter 6 - Shakespeare, Cultural Production, and Class Consciousness in
Antebellum New York City: Re-examining the Astor Place Riot (Matthew
Kendrick)
Chapter 7 - "As bountiful as mines of India": Shakespeare as India and the
First War of Indian Independence, 1857-1889 (Jess Hamlet)
Chapter 8 - A Most Civil Discourse: Jacob Gordin's The Jewish King Lear
and the Jewish-American Immigrant Community (John Milam)
Chapter 9 - "The Artist Must Take Sides": Paul Robeson and Civil Unrest
(Robert Sawyer)
Chapter 10 - The $64,000 Question: What Can Frances DeBerry tell us about
Shakespeare Scholarship in Civil Rights Era America? (Jeanette Nguyen Tran)
Chapter 11 - The "cockle of rebellion": Coriolanus During the Vietnam Era
(Mary Steible)
EPILOGUE
Chapter 12 - "Sea Changes": Civil Unrest in Shakespeare Studies and Beyond
(Sharon O'Dair)
Shakespeare, Civil Unrest, and the Negotiation of Cultural Value (Mark
Bayer and Joseph Navitsky)
PART I -SHAKESPEARE DURING THE CIVIL WARS
Chapter 1 - Celebrity Skulls (Heidi Craig)
Chapter 2 - "I thought my blood derived a Crown to us, / But now I find it
derives only Treason": Remembering and Forgetting the civil war (Rachel
Willie)
Chapter 3 - Richard Grant White, The Civil War, and the Future of American
Shakespeare Studies (Mark Bayer)
Chapter 4 - The American Civil War and the 1864 Tercentenary of
Shakespeare's Birth (Joseph Navitsky)
Chapter 5 - Outlaw Shakespeare: Frank James and Post-Civil War Justice
(Darlena Ciraulo)
PART II - SHAKESPEARE AND DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE
Chapter 6 - Shakespeare, Cultural Production, and Class Consciousness in
Antebellum New York City: Re-examining the Astor Place Riot (Matthew
Kendrick)
Chapter 7 - "As bountiful as mines of India": Shakespeare as India and the
First War of Indian Independence, 1857-1889 (Jess Hamlet)
Chapter 8 - A Most Civil Discourse: Jacob Gordin's The Jewish King Lear
and the Jewish-American Immigrant Community (John Milam)
Chapter 9 - "The Artist Must Take Sides": Paul Robeson and Civil Unrest
(Robert Sawyer)
Chapter 10 - The $64,000 Question: What Can Frances DeBerry tell us about
Shakespeare Scholarship in Civil Rights Era America? (Jeanette Nguyen Tran)
Chapter 11 - The "cockle of rebellion": Coriolanus During the Vietnam Era
(Mary Steible)
EPILOGUE
Chapter 12 - "Sea Changes": Civil Unrest in Shakespeare Studies and Beyond
(Sharon O'Dair)