Shakespeare and Ecology shows how environmental problems typically associated with the nineteenth and twentieth centuries including pollution, deforestation, and climate change, actually began in Shakespeare's time and are reflected in many of his plays.
Shakespeare and Ecology shows how environmental problems typically associated with the nineteenth and twentieth centuries including pollution, deforestation, and climate change, actually began in Shakespeare's time and are reflected in many of his plays.
Randall Martin holds degrees from Toronto, Birmingham, and Oxford. He is the author of Women, Murder, and Equity in Early Modern England (2007), and he has edited Every Man Out of His Humour for The Cambridge Works of Ben Jonson (2012) and Henry VI Part Three for the Oxford Shakespeare (2001). He has also recently co-edited Shakespeare/Adaptation/Modern Drama with Katherine Scheil (2011).
Inhaltsangabe
* Ecological Modernity in Shakespeare: an overview * 1: Localism, Deforestation, and Environmental Activism in The Merry Wives of Windsor * 2: Land-uses and Convertible Husbandry in As You Like It * 3: Gunpowder, Militarization, and Threshold Ecologies in Henry IV Part Two and Macbeth * 4: Biospheric Ecologies in Cymbeline * 5: Evolutionary Ecology in Hamlet and Antony and Cleopatra * Epilogue * Further Reading
* Ecological Modernity in Shakespeare: an overview * 1: Localism, Deforestation, and Environmental Activism in The Merry Wives of Windsor * 2: Land-uses and Convertible Husbandry in As You Like It * 3: Gunpowder, Militarization, and Threshold Ecologies in Henry IV Part Two and Macbeth * 4: Biospheric Ecologies in Cymbeline * 5: Evolutionary Ecology in Hamlet and Antony and Cleopatra * Epilogue * Further Reading
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