Shakespeare Performed: Essays in Honor of R.A. FoakesMany of the contributors to this collection, including E. A. J. Honigmann, M. M. Mahood, Jonathan Bate, and Stanley Wells (among others), have been centrally involved in examining, promoting, and sometimes questioning the critical dominance of the stable Shakespeare text, particularly as a result of performance. The essays range from the traditional poetical and theater history inquiries through bibliographical examinations and hermeneutical interpretations. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 84
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... Shakespearean text . The essays in this collection , divided into two groups , Shakespeare Performed in His Time and Shakespeare Performed in Our Time , share a concern with the " invoked authorizing presence " of Shakespeare . Many of ...
... Shakespearean text . The essays in this collection , divided into two groups , Shakespeare Performed in His Time and Shakespeare Performed in Our Time , share a concern with the " invoked authorizing presence " of Shakespeare . Many of ...
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... Shakespeare Performed in His Time : 7 ་ 11 Theatre , Text , and Interpretation Shakespeare's Foolosophy 17 JONATHAN BATE Shakespeare's Sense of Direction 33 M. M. MAHOOD Commerce and Patronage : The Lord Chamberlain's Men's Tour of 1597 ...
... Shakespeare Performed in His Time : 7 ་ 11 Theatre , Text , and Interpretation Shakespeare's Foolosophy 17 JONATHAN BATE Shakespeare's Sense of Direction 33 M. M. MAHOOD Commerce and Patronage : The Lord Chamberlain's Men's Tour of 1597 ...
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... Shakespeare's plays were received by his audience in his own time and in our time have helped create and shape our modern no- tions and conceptions of Shakespeare and his texts . Throughout his teaching and publishing career , Reg ...
... Shakespeare's plays were received by his audience in his own time and in our time have helped create and shape our modern no- tions and conceptions of Shakespeare and his texts . Throughout his teaching and publishing career , Reg ...
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... Shakespeare's plays to the promptbooks kept in his theatre ? Did Shakespeare and his company revise the plays before reviving them ? What may we learn about the plays , and about cultural change , from the perform- ance history of ...
... Shakespeare's plays to the promptbooks kept in his theatre ? Did Shakespeare and his company revise the plays before reviving them ? What may we learn about the plays , and about cultural change , from the perform- ance history of ...
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... Shakespeare's point of view would have been the human future , that is to say a consideration of its theatrical and criti- cal life in relation to later history ( examples of this kind of work would be Michael Dobson's treatment of ...
... Shakespeare's point of view would have been the human future , that is to say a consideration of its theatrical and criti- cal life in relation to later history ( examples of this kind of work would be Michael Dobson's treatment of ...
Contents
17 | |
Shakespeares Sense of Direction | 33 |
The Lord Chamberlains Mens Tour of 1597 | 56 |
No Quarrel but a slight Contention | 72 |
Julius Caesar and Sejanus | 88 |
Three Detachable Scenes | 108 |
Representing Falsehood | 122 |
The First Performances of Shakespeares Sonnets | 131 |
Aspects of King Lear in Performance | 198 |
Sleeves Gloves and Helens Placket | 216 |
Australian Shakespeare | 240 |
Cutting Women Down to Size in the Olivier and Loncraine Films of Richard III | 260 |
Film Editing | 273 |
Afterword | 299 |
306 | |
Notes on Contributors | 308 |
Common terms and phrases
action actors Andrew Gurr Angelo appear Arden argued audience Australian Ben Jonson Branagh's Cambridge University Press Cassius Chamberlain's character comedy conflated costume Cressida critics director door dramatic Duke Edgar edition editors Edmund effect Elizabethan English entrance entry essay exits Eyre Eyre's father Foakes Folio text Gloucester Hamlet Helen Henry Henry VI interpretation Isabella John Jonathan Bate Jonson Juliet Julius Caesar King Lear language Lear's lines Loncraine film London lord Lord Chamberlain's Men Macbeth Marlborough Measure for Measure modern Olivier Ophelia Oxford Pembroke performance Peter Peter Davison play's Players Poet political production Quarto and Folio Queen R. A. Foakes reading Reg Foakes Richard Richard III role royal scene screenplay seems Sejanus Shake Shakespeare's plays Shakespearian Sonnets speak speare speare's speech stage directions suggests Sydney textual theatre theatrical thou tion Titus tour tragedy Troilus Troilus and Cressida William Shakespeare women words
Popular passages
Page 24 - Is man no more than this? Consider him well. Thou owest the worm no silk, the beast no hide, the sheep no wool, the cat no perfume.
Page 21 - A man may see how this world goes, with no eyes. Look with thine ears: see how yon' justice rails upon yon' simple thief. Hark, in thine ear: Change places; and, handydandy, which is the justice, which is the thief?