A feminist companion to Shakespeare
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A feminist companion to Shakespeare
(Blackwell companions to literature and culture)
Blackwell, 2001
- : pbk
Available at 17 libraries
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Note
First published 2000
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The question is not whether Shakespeare studies needs feminism, but whether feminism needs Shakespeare. This is the explicitly political approach taken by all--women team of contributors to A Feminist Companion to Shakespeare.
Table of Contents
List of Contributors. Introduction: Dympna Callaghan. Part I: The history of feminist Shakespeare criticism:. 1. The Ladiesa Shakespeare: Juliet Fleming. 2. Margaret Cavendish, Shakespeare Critic: Katherine M. Romack. 3. Misogyny is Everywhere: Phyllis Rackin. Part II: Text and Language:. 4. Feminist Editing and the Body of the Text: Laurie E Maguire. 5. Made to write a whorea Upon?: Male and Female Use of the Word "Whore" in Shakespearea s Canon: Kay Stanton. 6. A word, Sweet Lucrece: Confession, Feminism and The Rape of Lucrece: Margo Hendricks. Part III: Social Economies:. 7. Gender, Class, and the Ideology of Comic Form, Much Ado About Nothing and Twelfth Night: Mihoko Suzuki. 8. Gendered a Giftsa in Shakespearea s Belmont: The Economies of Exchange in Early Modern England: Jyotsna G. Singh. Part IV: Race and Colonialism:. 9. The Great Indian Vanishing Trick--Colonialism, Property and the Family in A Midsummer Nighta s Dream: Ania Loomba. 10. Black Ram, White Ewe: Shakespeare, Race, and Women: Joyce Green MacDonald. 11. Sycorax in Algiers: Cultural Politics and Gynecology in Early Modern England: Rachana Sachdev. 12. Black and White and Dread All Over: The Shakespeare Theatera s "Photonegative" Othello and the body of Desdemona: Denise Albanese. Part V: Performing Sexuality:. 13. Women and Boys Playing Shakespeare: Juliet Dusinberre. 14. Mutant Scenes and a Minora Conflicts in Richard II: MollySmith. 15. Lovesickness, Gender, and Subjectivity: Twelfth Night and As You Like It: Carol Thomas Neely. 16. In the Lesbian Void: Woman--Woman Eroticism in Shakespearea s Plays: Theodora Jankowski. 17. Duncana s Corpse: Susan Zimmerman. Part VI: Religion:. 18. Others and Lovers in The Merchant of Venice: M. Lindsay Kaplan. 19. Between Idolatry and Astrology: Modes of Temporal Repetition in Romeo and Juliet: Philippa Berry. Index.
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