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, 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 69 is 'Shakespeare and Rome'. 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.
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 69 is 'Shakespeare and Rome'. The complete set of Survey volumes is also available online at http://www.cambridge.org/online/shakespearesurvey.
Papildus informācija
The theme for Shakespeare Survey 69 is 'Shakespeare and Rome'.
1. Past the size of dreaming? Shakespeare's Rome Robert Miola;
2. Puns
and prose: reflections on Shakespeare's usage Michael Silk;
3. 'Away with
him! He speaks Latin': 2 Henry VI and the uses of Roman antiquity David
Currell;
4. Shakespeare and the other Virgil: pity and imperium in Titus
Andronicus Patrick Gray;
5. 'Though this be method, yet there is madness
in't': cutting Ovid's tongue in recent stage and film performances of
Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus Christian M. Billing;
6. The noble Romans:
when Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra were made sequels Michael Jensen;
7. Venus and Lucrece un-anthologised: quotation and the long-term reception
of Shakespeare's poems Kate Rumbold;
8. Shakespeare's Juliet and Ovid's myths
of girlhood Heather James;
9. 'Lend me your ears': listening rhetoric and
political ideology in Julius Caesar Esther B. Schupak;
10. Plutarch's Porcia
and Shakespeare's Portia: two of a kind? George Mandel;
11. Shakespeare's
unholy martyrs: lessons in politics Dominique Goy-Blanquet;
12. 'A lean and
hungry look': sight, ekphrasis irony in Julius Caesar and Henry V Ros King;
13. 'Her strong toil of grace': charismatic performance from queens to
Quakers Ineke Murakami;
14. Coriolanus and the 'common part' Robert N.
Watson;
15. Coriolanus and the poetics of disgust Bradley Irish;
16. The
household of heroism: metaphor, economy and Coriolanus Verena Olejniczak
Lobsien;
17. 'Those organnons by which it mooves': Shakespearean theatre and
the Romish cult of the dead Thomas Rist;
18. 'Another part of the forest':
editors and locations in Shakespeare Peter Womack;
19. Unmanning Juliet
Denise A. Walen;
20. The second tetralogy's move from achievements to badges
Ceri Sullivan;
21. 'Let me not to the marriage of true minds': Shakespeare's
sonnet for Lady Mary Wroth Jane Kingsley-Smith;
22. Voluptuous language and
ambivalence in Shakespeare's sonnets Mats Malm;
23. Sympathetic sonnets
Katharine Craik;
24. Authenticating the inauthentic: Edmond Malone's editions
of the apocryphal Shakespeare Reiko Oya;
25. Paper worlds: a story of things
left behind Barbara Hodgdon;
26. An intimate and intermedial form: early
television Shakespeare from the BBC, 193739 John Wyver;
27. Tagging the
Bard: Shakespeare graffiti on and off stage Mariacristina Cavecchi;
28.
William Dugdale's monumental inaccuracies and Shakespeare's Stratford
monument Tom Reedy;
29. Shakespeare performances in England (and Wales) 2015
Stephen Purcell;
30. Professional Shakespeare productions in the British
Isles, January-December 2014 James Shaw; The year's contribution to
Shakespeare studies:
1. Critical studies Charlotte Scott;
2. Shakespeare in
performance Russell Jackson;
3. Editions and textual studies Peter Kirwan.
Peter Holland is McMeel Family Professor in Shakespeare Studies and Department Chair of the Department of Film, Television and Theater at the University of Notre Dame.