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CHF156.00
Habituellement expédié sous 2 à 4 semaines.
James Bulman is to be congratulated for having amassed a diversified collection of essays with reference to the contemporaneity of Shakespeare for Western audiences.
Auteur
James C. Bulman holds the Henry B. and Patricia Bush Tippie Chair in English at Allegheny College. General editor, with Carol Rutter, of the Shakespeare in Performance Series for Manchester University Press, he has written a performance history of The Merchant of Venice (1991) and edited anthologies on Shakespeare on Television (with H. R. Coursen, 1988), Shakespeare, Theory, and Performance (1996), and Shakespeare Re-Dressed: Cross-Gender Casting in Contemporary Performance (2008). His other books include The Heroic Idiom of Shakespearean Tragedy (1985), Comedy from Shakespeare to Sheridan (with A. R. Braunmuller, 1986), and, most recently, an edition of King Henry IV, Part Two for The Arden Shakespeare , Third Series (2016). He is a former president of the Shakespeare Association of America.
Texte du rabat
Presents the most current approaches to Shakespeare in performance, including how experimental modes of performance ensure Shakespeare's contemporaneity; how and why audiences respond to performances as they do; how technology has revolutionized our access to Shakespeare, and cultural appropriation in productions for international audiences.
Contenu
Introduction: Cross-Currents in Performance Criticism
PART I: EXPERIMENTAL SHAKESPEARE
1: Susan Bennett: Experimental Shakespeare
2: Bridget Escolme: Shakespeare and the Contemporary: Psychology, Culture, and Audience in Othello Production
3: Roberta Barker: 'Deared by Being Lacked': The Realist Legacy and the Art of Failure in Shakespearean Performance
4: Carol Chillington Rutter: Shakespeare for Dummies, or 'See the Puppets Dallying'
5: Peter Kirwan: Not-Shakespeare and the Shakespearean Ghost
6: Kim Solga: Shakespeare's Property Ladder: Women Directors and the Politics of 'Ownership'
7: Andrew James Hartley: Dialectical Shakespeare: Pedagogy in Performance
8: Ton Hoensalaars: Captive Shakespeare
PART II: RECEPTION
9: Ayanna Thompson: (How) Should We Listen to Audiences? Race, Reception, and the Audience Survey
10: Peter Holland: Forgetting Performance
11: Cary M. Mazer: Documenting the Demotic: Actor Blogs and the Guts of the Opera Singer
12: Robert Shaughnessy: The Time is Out of Joint: Shakespeare, Jet Lag, and the Rhythms of Performance
13: Paul Menzer: Archives and Anecdotes
14: Robert Conkie: Reveries of a Shakespearean Walker
15: Katherine Prince: Intimate and Epic Macbeths in Contemporary Performance
PART III: MEDIA AND TECHNOLOGY
16: Thomas Cartelli: High Tech Shakespeare in a Mediatized Globe: Ivo van Hove's Roman Tragedies and the Problem of Spectatorship
17: Stephen Purcell: 'It's All a Bit of a Risk': Reformulating 'Liveness' in Twenty-First Century Performances of Shakespeare
18: Pascale Aebischer: Technology and the Ethics of Spectatorship
19: W. B. Worthen: Shakespearean Technicity
20: Sarah Werner: Performance in Digital Editions of Shakespeare
21: Anthony R. Guneratne: Shakespeare's Rebirth: Performance in Music, Dance, Theatre, and Cinema in the Age of Electro-Digital Reproduction
22: Scott Newstok: Making 'Music at the Editing Table': Echoing Verdi in Welles' Othello
23: Samuel Crowl: 'Nobody's Perfect': Cross-Dressing and Gender-Bending in Sven Gade's Hamlet and Julie Taymor's Tempest
24: Courtney Lehmann: Can the Subaltern Sing? Liz White's Othello
PART IV: GLOBAL SHAKESPEARE
25: Alexa Alice Joubin: Global Shakespeare Criticism beyond the Nation-State
26: Dennis Kennedy: Global Shakespeare and Globalized Performance
27: Christie Carson: Performance, Presence, and Personal Responsibility: Witnessing Global Theatre in and around the Globe
28: Sonia Massai: Shakespeare with and without its Language
29: Rose Elfman: Slapstick against Stereotypes in South Sudan's Cymbeline
30: Colette Gordon: Open and Closed: Workshopping Shakespeare in South Africa
31: Adele Seeff: Indigenizing Shakespeare in South Africa
32: Alfredo Michel Modenessi: 'Victim of Improvisation' in Latin America: Shakespeare Out-sourced and In-taken
33: Robert Ormsby: Global Cultural Tourism at Canada's Stratford Festival: The Adventures of Pericles
34: Michiko Suematsu: Verbal and Visual Representations in Modern Japanese Shakespeare Productions
35: Li Ruru: There Is a World Elsewhere: Shakespeare on the Chinese Stage
36: Yong Li Lan: Translating Performance: the Asian Shakespeare Intercultural Archive