Shakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production which has published the best international scholarship in English since 1948. The theme for Volume 66 is 'Working with Shakespeare'. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at http://www.cambridge.org/online/shakespearesurvey.
Shakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, the Survey has published the best international scholarship in English and many of its essays have become classics of Shakespeare criticism. Each volume is devoted to a theme, or play, or group of plays; each also contains a section of reviews of that year's textual and critical studies and of the year's major British performances. The theme for Volume 66 is 'Working with Shakespeare', and Tiffany Stern's essay has been selected by the Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society for its Barbara Palmer/Martin Stevens award for best new essay in early drama studies, 2014. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at http://www.cambridge.org/online/shakespearesurvey. This fully searchable resource enables users to browse by author, essay and volume, search by play, theme and topic and save and bookmark their results.
Recenzijas
'Tiffany Stern's essay, 'Sermons, Plays and Note-Takers: Hamlet Q1 as a 'Noted' Text', reads like an especially well-written and deftly plotted mystery novel. Taking as her subject the so-called 'bad quarto' of Hamlet, Stern leads the reader through a thoroughly documented and totally compelling rethinking of Q1's origins. [ She] persuasively argues that this text is the product of a note-taking scribal audience who employed contemporary notational habits to produce a 'pirated' text for publication [ She] brings to life a new world of early modern performance through descriptions and details that offer many small openings onto the textual culture of the period this essay not only offers a significant reassessment of Hamlet Q1, but also makes a claim for the cultural importance of note-taking practices in the early modern period more generally.' Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society
Papildus informācija
The theme for Shakespeare Survey 66 is 'Working with Shakespeare'.
1. Sermons, plays and note-takers: Hamlet Q1 as a 'noted' text Tiffany
Stern;
2. Equivocations: reading the Shakespeare/Middleton Macbeth Cordelia
Zukerman;
3. The date of Sir Thomas More Hugh Craig;
4. Filming 'the weight
of this sad time': Yasujiro Ozu's rereading of King Lear in Tokyo Story
(1953) Reiko Oya;
5. Cursing to learn: theatricality and the creation of
character in The Tempest David Schalkwyk;
6. Like an Olympian wrestling
Richard Wilson;
7. 'Doing Shakespeare': how Shakespeare became a school
'subject' Janet Bottoms;
8. (Mis)advising Shakespeare's players Michael
Cordner;
9. Making the work of play Michael Pavelka (in conversation with
Carol Chillington Rutter);
10. 'On the wrong track to ourselves': Armin
Senser's Shakespeare and the issue of artistic creativity in contemporary
German poetry Tobias Döring;
11. 'What country, friends, is this?': Cultural
identity and the World Shakespeare Festival Stephen Purcell;
12. Redefining
knowledge: an epistemological shift in Shakespeare studies Péter Dįvidhįzi;
13. Shakespeare as presentist John Drakakis;
14. Greater Shakespeare:
working, playing and making with Shakespeare Hester Lees-Jeffries;
15. 'A
joint and corporate voice': re-working Shakespearean seminars Scott L.
Newstok;
16. Shakespeare and the cultures of translation Ton Hoenselaars;
17.
Shakespeare's inhumanity Kiernan Ryan;
18. Making something out of 'nothing'
in Shakespeare R. S. White;
19. 'A book where one may read strange matters':
en-visaging character and emotion on the Shakespearean stage Michael Neill;
20. 'Hear the ambassadors!': Marking Shakespeare's Venice connection Carol
Chillington Rutter;
21. 'O, what a sympathy of woe is this': passionate
sympathy in Titus Andronicus Richard Meek;
22. Who drew the Jew that
Shakespeare knew?: Misericords and medieval Jews in The Merchant Of Venice M.
Lindsay Kaplan;
23. 'Imaginary puissance': Shakespearean theatre and the law
of agency in Henry V, Twelfth Night and Measure For Measure Erica Sheen;
24.
Hamlet and empiricism James Hirsh;
25. 'Let me see what thou hast writ':
mapping the ShakespeareFletcher working relationship in The Two Noble
Kinsmen at the Swan Varsha Panjwani;
26. Shakespeare performances in England
(and Wales) 2012 Carol Chillington Rutter;
27. Professional Shakespeare
productions in the British Isles, January-December 2011 James Shaw;
28. The
year's contribution to Shakespeare studies:
1. Critical studies reviewed by
Charlotte Scott;
2. Shakespeare in performance reviewed by Russell Jackson;
3. Editions and textual studies reviewed by Sonia Massai.
Peter Holland is McMeel Family Professor in Shakespeare Studies and Department Chair, Department of Film, Television and Theater at the University of Notre Dame.