Avant-garde Hamlet : text, stage, screen

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Bibliographic Information

Avant-garde Hamlet : text, stage, screen

R.S. White

(Shakespeare and the stage)

Fairleigh Dickinson University Press , Co-published by Rowman & Littlefield, c2015

  • : cloth

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Note

Bibliography: p. 187-200

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Hamlet stands as a high water mark of canonical art, yet it has equally attracted rebels and experimenters, those avant-garde writers, dramatists, performers, and filmmakers who, in their adaptations and appropriations, seek new ways of expressing innovative and challenging thoughts in the hope that they can change perceptions of their own world. One reason for this, as the book argues, is that the source text that is their inspiration was written in the same spirit. Hamlet as a work of art exhibits many aspects of the "vanguard" movements in every society and artistic milieux, an avant-garde vision of struggle against conformity, which retains an edge of provocative novelty. Accordingly, it has always inspired unorthodox adaptations and can be known by a neglected portion of the company it keeps, the avant-garde in every age. After placing Hamlet alongside "cutting edge" works in Shakespeare's time, such as Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy, chapters deal with the ways in which experimental writers, theatre practitioners, and film-makers have used the play down to the present day to develop their own avant-garde visions. This is a part of the uncanny ability of Shakespeare's Hamlet to be "ever-now, ever-new."

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 1. Aspects of Avant-Garde 2. Avant-Garde Hamlet: Then and Now 3. Hamlet as Avant-Garde Text 4. Hamlet and Avant-Garde Literature 5. On Stage: Hamlet and Avant-Garde Theatre 6. On Screen: Hamlet and Film Genres Epilogue Bibliography

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