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E-grāmata: Shakespeare and Renaissance Literary Theories: Anglo-Italian Transactions

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Throwing fresh light on a much discussed but still controversial field, this collection of essays places the presence of Italian literary theories against and alongside the background of English dramatic traditions, to assess this influence in the emergence of Elizabethan theatrical convention and the innovative dramatic practices under the early Stuarts. Contributors respond anew to the process of cultural exchange, cultural transaction, and generic intertextuality involved in the debate on dramatic theory and literary kinds in the Renaissance, exploring, with special emphasis on Shakespeare's works, the level of cultural appropriation, contamination, revision, and subversion characterizing early modern English drama. Shakespeare and Renaissance Literary Theories offers a wide range of approaches and critical viewpoints of leading international scholars concerning questions which are still open to debate and which may pave the way to further groundbreaking analyses on Shakespeare's art of dramatic construction and that of his contemporaries.

Recenzijas

'... [ a] valuable collection...'Journal of Anglo-Italian Studies 'Marrapodi judiciously allows his contributors to range widely. The book demonstrates how the field of Anglo-Italian studies is in contact with many other areas of current research. In a book that is itself so concerned with intertexts and intellectual matrives, Marrapodi rightly strives for, and achieves, a sense of diffusion.' Renaissance Quarterly

List of Figures
ix
Notes on Contributors xi
Acknowledgements xv
Introduction: Shakespeare against Genres 1(24)
Michele Marrapodi
PART I ART, RHETORIC, STYLE
1 Shakespeare and the Art of Forgetting
25(12)
Stephen Orgel
2 Shakespearean Comedy: Postmodern Theory and Humanist Poetics
37(20)
Robin Headlam Wells
3 Shakespeare: What Rhetoric Accomplishes
57(18)
John Roe
4 Shakespearean Outdoings: Titus Andronicus and Italian Renaissance Tragedy
75(14)
Mariangela Tempera
5 Transalpine Wonders: Shakespeare's Marvelous Aesthetics
89(16)
Adam Max Cohen
PART II GENRES, MODELS, FORMS
6 Hamlet versus Commedia dell'Arte
105(14)
Frances K. Barasch
7 The End of Shakespeare's Machiavellian Moment: Julius Caesar, Shakespeare's Historiography, and Dramatic Form
119(18)
Hugh Grady
8 The Problem of Old Age: Anticomedy in As You Like It and Ruzante's L'Anconitana
137(16)
Anthony Ellis
9 Ruzante and Shakespeare: A Comparative Case-Study
153(22)
Robert Henke
10 The `Woman as Wonder' Trope: From Commedia Grave to Shakespeare's Pericles and the Last Plays
175(28)
Michele Marrapodi
PART III SPECTACLE, AESTHETICS, REPRESENTATION
11 Shakespeare's Italian Carnival: Venice and Verona Revisited
203(18)
Franccois Laroque
12 (Re)fracted Art and Ordered Nature: Italian Renaissance Aesthetics in Shakespeare's Richard II
221(14)
Susan Payne
13 `Tis Pity She's Italian: Performing the Courtesan on the Early Seventeenth-Century English Stage
235(12)
Keir Elam
14 Silence, Seeing, and Performativity: Shakespeare and the Paragone
247(18)
Duncan Salkeld
15 Italian Spectacle and the Worlds of James VI/I
265(16)
Michael Wyatt
PART IV CODA
16 How Do We Know When Worlds Meet?
281(6)
Louise George Clubb
Bibliography 287(18)
Index 305
Michele Marrapodi is Full Professor of English Language and Literature, and History of English Drama, in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Palermo, Italy.