Performing Shakespearean Appropriations: Essays in Honor of Christy Desmet
Performing Shakespearean Appropriations explores the production and consumption of Shakespeare in acts of adaptation and appropriation across time periods and through a range of performance topics. The ten essays, moving from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, address uses of Shakespeare in the novel, television, cinema, and digital media. Drawing on Christy Desmet's work, several contributors figure appropriation as a posthumanist enterprise that engages with electronic Shakespeare by dismantling, reassembling, and recreating Shakespearean texts in and for digital platforms. The collection thus looks at media and performance technologies diachronically in its focus on Shakespeare’s afterlives. Contributors also construe the notion of “performance” broadly to include performances of selves, of communities, of agencies, and of authenticity—either Shakespeare’s, or the user’s, or both. The essays examine both specific performances and larger trends across media, and they consider a full range of modes: from formal and professional to casual and amateur; from the fixed and traditional to the ephemeral, the itinerant, and the irreverent.
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Performing Shakespearean Appropriations: Essays in Honor of Christy Desmet
Performing Shakespearean Appropriations explores the production and consumption of Shakespeare in acts of adaptation and appropriation across time periods and through a range of performance topics. The ten essays, moving from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, address uses of Shakespeare in the novel, television, cinema, and digital media. Drawing on Christy Desmet's work, several contributors figure appropriation as a posthumanist enterprise that engages with electronic Shakespeare by dismantling, reassembling, and recreating Shakespearean texts in and for digital platforms. The collection thus looks at media and performance technologies diachronically in its focus on Shakespeare’s afterlives. Contributors also construe the notion of “performance” broadly to include performances of selves, of communities, of agencies, and of authenticity—either Shakespeare’s, or the user’s, or both. The essays examine both specific performances and larger trends across media, and they consider a full range of modes: from formal and professional to casual and amateur; from the fixed and traditional to the ephemeral, the itinerant, and the irreverent.
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Overview

Performing Shakespearean Appropriations explores the production and consumption of Shakespeare in acts of adaptation and appropriation across time periods and through a range of performance topics. The ten essays, moving from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, address uses of Shakespeare in the novel, television, cinema, and digital media. Drawing on Christy Desmet's work, several contributors figure appropriation as a posthumanist enterprise that engages with electronic Shakespeare by dismantling, reassembling, and recreating Shakespearean texts in and for digital platforms. The collection thus looks at media and performance technologies diachronically in its focus on Shakespeare’s afterlives. Contributors also construe the notion of “performance” broadly to include performances of selves, of communities, of agencies, and of authenticity—either Shakespeare’s, or the user’s, or both. The essays examine both specific performances and larger trends across media, and they consider a full range of modes: from formal and professional to casual and amateur; from the fixed and traditional to the ephemeral, the itinerant, and the irreverent.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781683933618
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 06/29/2022
Series: Shakespeare and the Stage
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 252
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Matthew Kozusko is professor of English at Ursinus College.
Darlena Ciraulo is professor of English at the University of Central Missouri.
Robert Sawyer is professor of English at East Tennessee State University.

Table of Contents

Robert Sawyer, Foreword
Darlena Ciraulo and Matthew Kozusko, “Introduction”

Part I: Past
Jonathan Baldo, “What's in a Game?: Handy-Dandy, War, and Foreign Relations in King Lear”
Anne Williams, “Strawberry Hill: The House that Hamlet Built”
Katherine Scheil, “What's Past is Prologue: Shakespeare the Romantic”

Part II: Present
Darlena Ciraulo, “Shakespeare's Bust and the 1960s Batman TV Show”
Peter Holland, “On the Shakespeare Trail”
Richard Finkelstein, “Shakespeare in the Dorm: The Rhetoric of Character in YouTube Shakespeare”
Matt Kozusko, “Why are Shakespeare's Characters so 'Relatable'?”

Part III: Future
Lisa S. Starks, “Levinas, Jessica, and Memory in Productions of The Merchant of Venice”
Alexa Alice Joubin, “Transgender Theory and Global Shakespeare
Stephen O'Neill, “Quoting Machines: Shakespearean things in and beyond HBO's Westworld”
Sharon O'Dair, “On Character, Character Criticism, and The King is Alive: For Christy Desmet”

Sujata Iyengar, Afterword
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