Shakespeare's Afterlife in the Royal Collection
Dynasty, Ideology, and National Culture
Shakespeare's Afterlife in the Royal Collection
Dynasty, Ideology, and National Culture
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Explores the extent to which members of the royal family have appropriated the creative legacy of Shakespeare, from the mid-eighteenth century to the mid-twentieth century, in order to shore up royal and national ideologies and to assert the legitimacy of the monarchy.
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Explores the extent to which members of the royal family have appropriated the creative legacy of Shakespeare, from the mid-eighteenth century to the mid-twentieth century, in order to shore up royal and national ideologies and to assert the legitimacy of the monarchy.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm
- ISBN-13: 9780198923152
- ISBN-10: 0198923155
- Artikelnr.: 71566001
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm
- ISBN-13: 9780198923152
- ISBN-10: 0198923155
- Artikelnr.: 71566001
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Sally Barnden (BA York, MA, and PhD King's College London) is a Lecturer in Literature and Visual Culture at Swansea University, and was a postdoctoral research associate for 'Shakespeare in the Royal Collection.' She is the author of Still Shakespeare and the Photography of Performance (Cambridge, 2020) and Shakespeare and the Royal Actor (Oxford, 2024). Gordon McMullan (BA Birmingham, MA Kansas, DPhil Oxford) is a Professor of English at King's College London, where he has worked since 1995; prior to that he was a lecturer in English at Newcastle University. He has held fellowships in the United States, Australia, and Denmark; he has published in the fields of Shakespeare, early modern drama, late-life creativity, and environmental humanities; and in 2016 he received the Globe Theatre's Sam Wanamaker Award for his creation and direction of Shakespeare400, London's consortium marking the Shakespeare Quatercentenary. He was Principal Investigator for the AHRC-funded project 'Shakespeare in the Royal Collection' (2018-22). Kate Retford (BA, MA, and PhD University of Warwick) is a Professor of History of Art and Head of the School of Historical Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. She has published widely on eighteenth-century British art, particularly on gender, portraiture, and the country house. Her research has been funded by the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, the AHRC, the British Academy, and, most recently, the Leverhulme Trust. Her recent publications include The Conversation Piece: Making Modern Art in Eighteenth-Century Britain (2017) and The Georgian London Town House: Building, Collecting and Display, co-edited with Susanna Avery-Quash (2019). Kirsten Tambling completed her PhD in History of Art at Birkbeck, University of London on the art of Jean-Antoine Watteau and William Hogarth. She was a postdoctoral research associate for 'Shakespeare in the Royal Collection', and subsequently Associate Lecturer on the Curating the Art Museum programme at the Courtauld Institute of Art. She has worked in various museums and collections, including the Royal Collection Trust and Watts Gallery, where she was co-curator of the exhibition James Henry Pullen: Inmate, Inventor, Genius (2018). She has published articles on eighteenth-century art, the intersection of art and psychiatry and the history of collections.
* Introduction
* 1616
* 1: Gordon McMullan: The 'Disappointment' of Charles I's Shakespeare
Second Folio
* 1700
* 2: Emrys Jones: Henry V and Early Hanoverian Self-Fashioning
* 3: Kate Retford: 'A Wild and Unruly Youth'
* 4: Shormishtha Panja: Moral painting
* 5: Anna Myers: David Garrick and the President's Chair
* 6: Rosie Dias: Queen Charlotte and the Royal Narratives of Boydell's
Shakespeare Prints
* 7: Arthur Burns: George III and the other 'Mad King'
* 8: Essaka Joshua: Disability and Mutable Spectatorship
* 9: Fiona Ritchie: Fake and Authentic Shakespeare
* 1800
* 10: Mark Westgarth: 'Well-Authenticated Blocks'
* 11: Emma Stuart: Why did George IV own a Shakespeare First Folio?
* 12: Kate Heard: From Performance to Portfolio
* 13: Michael Dobson: Hamlet Disowned
* 14: Lynne Vallone: Princess Victoria and the Cult of Celebrity
* 15: Eilís Smyth: Shakespeare in the Rubens Room
* 16: Sally Barnden: Monument and Montage
* 17: Gail Marshall: Puck and the Prince of Wales
* 18: Morna O'Neill: Much Ado about Tapestry
* 19: Vijeta Saini: Disappearances and The Durbar
* 1900
* 20: Kirsten Tambling: 'All England in Warm Sepia': Queen Mary and the
Church of the Holy Trinity
* 21: Elizabeth Clark Ashby: Shakespeare in Miniature
* 22: Eleine Ng-Gagneux: Shashibiya
* 23: Kathryn Vomero Santos: Cultural (Dis)inheritance and the Decline
of Empire in The Prince's Choice
* Bibliography
* 1616
* 1: Gordon McMullan: The 'Disappointment' of Charles I's Shakespeare
Second Folio
* 1700
* 2: Emrys Jones: Henry V and Early Hanoverian Self-Fashioning
* 3: Kate Retford: 'A Wild and Unruly Youth'
* 4: Shormishtha Panja: Moral painting
* 5: Anna Myers: David Garrick and the President's Chair
* 6: Rosie Dias: Queen Charlotte and the Royal Narratives of Boydell's
Shakespeare Prints
* 7: Arthur Burns: George III and the other 'Mad King'
* 8: Essaka Joshua: Disability and Mutable Spectatorship
* 9: Fiona Ritchie: Fake and Authentic Shakespeare
* 1800
* 10: Mark Westgarth: 'Well-Authenticated Blocks'
* 11: Emma Stuart: Why did George IV own a Shakespeare First Folio?
* 12: Kate Heard: From Performance to Portfolio
* 13: Michael Dobson: Hamlet Disowned
* 14: Lynne Vallone: Princess Victoria and the Cult of Celebrity
* 15: Eilís Smyth: Shakespeare in the Rubens Room
* 16: Sally Barnden: Monument and Montage
* 17: Gail Marshall: Puck and the Prince of Wales
* 18: Morna O'Neill: Much Ado about Tapestry
* 19: Vijeta Saini: Disappearances and The Durbar
* 1900
* 20: Kirsten Tambling: 'All England in Warm Sepia': Queen Mary and the
Church of the Holy Trinity
* 21: Elizabeth Clark Ashby: Shakespeare in Miniature
* 22: Eleine Ng-Gagneux: Shashibiya
* 23: Kathryn Vomero Santos: Cultural (Dis)inheritance and the Decline
of Empire in The Prince's Choice
* Bibliography
* Introduction
* 1616
* 1: Gordon McMullan: The 'Disappointment' of Charles I's Shakespeare
Second Folio
* 1700
* 2: Emrys Jones: Henry V and Early Hanoverian Self-Fashioning
* 3: Kate Retford: 'A Wild and Unruly Youth'
* 4: Shormishtha Panja: Moral painting
* 5: Anna Myers: David Garrick and the President's Chair
* 6: Rosie Dias: Queen Charlotte and the Royal Narratives of Boydell's
Shakespeare Prints
* 7: Arthur Burns: George III and the other 'Mad King'
* 8: Essaka Joshua: Disability and Mutable Spectatorship
* 9: Fiona Ritchie: Fake and Authentic Shakespeare
* 1800
* 10: Mark Westgarth: 'Well-Authenticated Blocks'
* 11: Emma Stuart: Why did George IV own a Shakespeare First Folio?
* 12: Kate Heard: From Performance to Portfolio
* 13: Michael Dobson: Hamlet Disowned
* 14: Lynne Vallone: Princess Victoria and the Cult of Celebrity
* 15: Eilís Smyth: Shakespeare in the Rubens Room
* 16: Sally Barnden: Monument and Montage
* 17: Gail Marshall: Puck and the Prince of Wales
* 18: Morna O'Neill: Much Ado about Tapestry
* 19: Vijeta Saini: Disappearances and The Durbar
* 1900
* 20: Kirsten Tambling: 'All England in Warm Sepia': Queen Mary and the
Church of the Holy Trinity
* 21: Elizabeth Clark Ashby: Shakespeare in Miniature
* 22: Eleine Ng-Gagneux: Shashibiya
* 23: Kathryn Vomero Santos: Cultural (Dis)inheritance and the Decline
of Empire in The Prince's Choice
* Bibliography
* 1616
* 1: Gordon McMullan: The 'Disappointment' of Charles I's Shakespeare
Second Folio
* 1700
* 2: Emrys Jones: Henry V and Early Hanoverian Self-Fashioning
* 3: Kate Retford: 'A Wild and Unruly Youth'
* 4: Shormishtha Panja: Moral painting
* 5: Anna Myers: David Garrick and the President's Chair
* 6: Rosie Dias: Queen Charlotte and the Royal Narratives of Boydell's
Shakespeare Prints
* 7: Arthur Burns: George III and the other 'Mad King'
* 8: Essaka Joshua: Disability and Mutable Spectatorship
* 9: Fiona Ritchie: Fake and Authentic Shakespeare
* 1800
* 10: Mark Westgarth: 'Well-Authenticated Blocks'
* 11: Emma Stuart: Why did George IV own a Shakespeare First Folio?
* 12: Kate Heard: From Performance to Portfolio
* 13: Michael Dobson: Hamlet Disowned
* 14: Lynne Vallone: Princess Victoria and the Cult of Celebrity
* 15: Eilís Smyth: Shakespeare in the Rubens Room
* 16: Sally Barnden: Monument and Montage
* 17: Gail Marshall: Puck and the Prince of Wales
* 18: Morna O'Neill: Much Ado about Tapestry
* 19: Vijeta Saini: Disappearances and The Durbar
* 1900
* 20: Kirsten Tambling: 'All England in Warm Sepia': Queen Mary and the
Church of the Holy Trinity
* 21: Elizabeth Clark Ashby: Shakespeare in Miniature
* 22: Eleine Ng-Gagneux: Shashibiya
* 23: Kathryn Vomero Santos: Cultural (Dis)inheritance and the Decline
of Empire in The Prince's Choice
* Bibliography