Special section, Shakespeare and the bonds of service
著者
書誌事項
Special section, Shakespeare and the bonds of service
(The Shakespearean international yearbook, 5)
Ashgate, c2005
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 341-368) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In this issue of "The Shakespearean International" yearbook, the special section focuses on 'Shakespeare and the Bonds of Service.' The guest editor for the section is Michael Neill, Professor of English at the University of Auckland and author of "Issues of Death: Mortality and Identity in English Renaissance Tragedy". The essays in this section consider the resonance of both the theory and practice of "service" in early modern English society and drama. The "Shakespearean International Yearbook" continues to provide an annual survey of important issues and developments in contemporary Shakespeare studies. Representing international perspectives on Shakespeare studies, contributors to this issue come from the US, Canada and the UK, Japan, India, New Zealand and South Africa. They appraise or reappraise current thinking about such matters as scepticism, psychoanalysis, appropriation and adaptation, textual traditions and performance practices (including a Production Diary for The Merchant of Venice, contributed by Barrie Rutter of Northern Broadsides). Essays on the plays and poems tend to focus on 'where we are now', and what has changed, is changing, or ought to change.
目次
- Introduction: some problems in historical criticism, Robin Headlam Wells. Shakespeare and the Bonds of Service, edited by Michael Neill: Love and service in The Taming of the Shrew and All's Well that Ends Well, David Shalkwyk
- 'We owe thee much': Service in King John, David Evett
- King Lear, service and the deconstruction of Protestant idealism, Mark Thornton Burnett
- 'No, let me be obsequious in thy heart': service and friendship in Shakespeare's Sonnets, Judy Weil
- Labours of love: women, marriage and service in Twelfth Night and The Compleat Servant-Maid, Michelle M. Dowd
- 'A woman's service': Gender, subordination, and the erotics of rank in the drama of Shakespeare and his contemporaries, Michael Neill. Psychoanalytical Approaches: Psychoanalysis and its contemporary engagements, Heather Hirschfeld
- Psychoanalysis, idealizing, and magic: reading The Tempest, David Mikics
- Murdering sleep in Macbeth: the mental world of the protagonist, Jennifer Lewin. Reappraisals: Shakespeare's Coriolanus and Roman honour, Alexander Welsh
- 'Look up a height': King Lear, Titus, and the scandal of tragedy, Michael Goldman
- The politics of Measure for Measure, Fritz Levy
- 'Double dealing ambodexters': the paradoxes of playing, Peter G. Platt. Performance and Productions: A production diary for northern broadsides' The Merchant of Venice, Barrie Rutter
- Multi-Shakespeare: performing King Lear in India, Poonam Trivedi
- The transforming of Henry V, Andrew Gurr
- 'Music within' and 'Music Above', Mariko Ichikawa. Notes on contributors
- Bibliography
- Index.
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