Lavoisier S.A.S.
14 rue de Provigny
94236 Cachan cedex
FRANCE

Heures d'ouverture 08h30-12h30/13h30-17h30
Tél.: +33 (0)1 47 40 67 00
Fax: +33 (0)1 47 40 67 02


Url canonique : www.lavoisier.fr/livre/culture-loisirs/shakespeare-s-hamlet-in-an-era-of-textual-exhaustion/descriptif_4003404
Url courte ou permalien : www.lavoisier.fr/livre/notice.asp?ouvrage=4003404

SHAKESPEARE’S HAMLET IN AN ERA OF TEXTUAL EXHAUSTION Routledge Studies in Shakespeare Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Freeman Loftis Sonya, Kellar Allison, Ulevich Lisa

Couverture de l’ouvrage SHAKESPEARE’S HAMLET IN AN ERA OF TEXTUAL EXHAUSTION

"Post-Hamlet: Shakespeare in an Era of Textual Exhaustion" examines how postmodern audiences continue to reengage with Hamlet in spite of our culture?s oversaturation with this most canonical of texts. Combining adaptation theory and performance theory with examinations of avant-garde performances and other unconventional appropriations of Shakespeare?s play, Post-Hamlet examines Shakespeare?s Hamlet as a central symbol of our era?s "textual exhaustion," an era in which the reader/viewer is bombarded by text?printed, digital, and otherwise. The essays in this edited collection, divided into four sections, focus on the radical employment of Hamlet as a cultural artifact that adaptors and readers use to depart from textual "authority" in, for instance, radical English-language performance, international film and stage performance, pop-culture and multi-media appropriation, and pedagogy.

Acknowledgments

Notes on Contributors

Chapter 1. Introduction: Post-Hamlet

Sonya Freeman Loftis, Allison Kellar, and Lisa Ulevich

Section I: Post-Hamlet Appropriations

Chapter 2. Posthuman Hamlets: Ghosts in the Machine

Todd Andrew Borlik

Chapter 3. Or Not to Be: Dancing Beyond Hamlet in Christopher Wheeldon’s Misericordes/Elsinore

Elizabeth Klett

Chapter 4. "It’s the Opheliac in me": Ophelia, Emilie Autumn, and the role of Hamlet in Discussing Mental Disability

Chloe Owen

Chapter 5. "I the matter will reword": The Ghost of Hamlet in Translation

Jim Casey

Chapter 6. Locating Hamlet in Kashmir: Haider, Terrorism, and Shakespearean Transmission

Amrita Sen

Section II: Post-Hamlet Performances

Chapter 7. "Denmark is a Prison": Hamlet for Inclusive and Incarcerated Audiences

Sheila T. Cavanagh

Chapter 8. Revisionist Q1 and the Poetics of Alternatives: Vindicating Hamlet’s "Bad" Quarto on Page and Stage in Japan and Beyond

Yi-Hsin Hsu

Chapter 9. "Poem Unlimited, Space Unlimited": The Case of the Naked Hamlet

Adam Sheaffer

Section III: Post-Hamlet Classrooms

Chapter 10. After Words: Hamlet’s Unfinished Business in the Liberal Arts Classroom

Deneen Senasi

Chapter 11. "Read freely, my dear": Education and Agency in Lisa Klein’s Ophelia

Victoria R. Farmer

Chapter 12. To Relate or Not to Relate: Questioning the Pedagogical Value of Relatable Hamlet

Erin M. Presley

Section IV: Post-Hamlet Post-Script

Chapter 13. DIE-JESTING stURNe’s BURIALLs: Publication, Plagiarism, Pseudonymity, Pseudography, Cenography, Palimpsestuosity, Posthumography, and the Propriety or Pathos of Posterity

Richard Burt

Index

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Sonya Freeman Loftis is an Associate Professor of English at Morehouse College.

Allison Kellar is an Assistant Professor of English and Director of Honors at Wingate University.

Lisa Ulevich received her Ph.D. from Georgia State University in 2016. Her research interests include the poetics of allusion, narrative theory, and the mediation of identity through poetic and other formal structures.