Visiting scenes of greeting, feeding, entertaining, and sheltering, this volume focuses on hospitality in Shakespeare's work, demonstrating how hospitality provides a compelling frame for the core ethical, political, theological, and ecological questions of Shakespeare's and our time. By reading the plays in conjunction with contemporary theory
Visiting scenes of greeting, feeding, entertaining, and sheltering, this volume focuses on hospitality in Shakespeare's work, demonstrating how hospitality provides a compelling frame for the core ethical, political, theological, and ecological questions of Shakespeare's and our time. By reading the plays in conjunction with contemporary theory
Julia Reinhard Lupton is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Irvine. David B. Goldstein is Associate Professor of English at York University, Canada.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction David B. Goldstein and Julia Reinhard Lupton Section One: Oikos and Polis Chapter 1 'Will you walk in, my lord?': Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida and the Anxiety of Oikos Andrew Hiscock Chapter 2 A Digression to Hospitality: Thrift and Christmastime in Shakespeare and in the Literature of Husbandry Jessica Rosenberg Chapter 3 "Here's Strange Alteration!": Hospitality, Sovereignty And Political Discord In Coriolanus Thomas P. Anderson Section Two: Economy and Ecology Chapter 4 Hospitality's Risk, Grace's Bargain: Uncertain Economies in The Winter's Tale James Kearney Chapter 5 Hospitality in Anthony and Cleopatra Sean Lawrence Section Three: Script Chapter 6 Ave Desdemona David Hillman Chapter 7 As You Like It and the Theater of Hospitality James Kuzner Chapter 8 Hospitable Times with Shakespeare: A Reading of King Lear Thomas J. Moretti Section Four: Scripture Chapter 9 "Her father loved me, oft invited me": Staging Shakespeare's Hidden Hospitality in The Travels of the Three English Brothers Sheiba Kian Kaufman Chapter 10 Hospitality in Twelfth Night: Playing at (the Limits of) Home Joan Pong Linton Chapter 11 Thinking Hospitably with Timon of Athens: Toward an Ethics of Stewardship Michael Noschka
Introduction David B. Goldstein and Julia Reinhard Lupton Section One: Oikos and Polis Chapter 1 'Will you walk in, my lord?': Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida and the Anxiety of Oikos Andrew Hiscock Chapter 2 A Digression to Hospitality: Thrift and Christmastime in Shakespeare and in the Literature of Husbandry Jessica Rosenberg Chapter 3 "Here's Strange Alteration!": Hospitality, Sovereignty And Political Discord In Coriolanus Thomas P. Anderson Section Two: Economy and Ecology Chapter 4 Hospitality's Risk, Grace's Bargain: Uncertain Economies in The Winter's Tale James Kearney Chapter 5 Hospitality in Anthony and Cleopatra Sean Lawrence Section Three: Script Chapter 6 Ave Desdemona David Hillman Chapter 7 As You Like It and the Theater of Hospitality James Kuzner Chapter 8 Hospitable Times with Shakespeare: A Reading of King Lear Thomas J. Moretti Section Four: Scripture Chapter 9 "Her father loved me, oft invited me": Staging Shakespeare's Hidden Hospitality in The Travels of the Three English Brothers Sheiba Kian Kaufman Chapter 10 Hospitality in Twelfth Night: Playing at (the Limits of) Home Joan Pong Linton Chapter 11 Thinking Hospitably with Timon of Athens: Toward an Ethics of Stewardship Michael Noschka
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