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MARC Record from Library of Congress

Record ID marc_loc_updates/v37.i46.records.utf8:8637618:3416
Source Library of Congress
Download Link /show-records/marc_loc_updates/v37.i46.records.utf8:8637618:3416?format=raw

LEADER: 03416nam a22002658a 4500
001 2009048043
003 DLC
005 20091116130917.0
008 091116s2010 nyu 000 0 eng
010 $a 2009048043
020 $a9780521884792 (hardback)
040 $aDLC$cDLC
050 00 $aPR3091$b.S3635 2010
082 00 $a792.9/5$222
245 00 $aShakespeare in stages :$bnew theatre histories /$c[edited by] Christine Dymkowski, Christie Carson.
260 $aNew York :$bCambridge University Press,$c2010.
263 $a1002
300 $ap. cm.
520 $a"The history of Shakespearean performance is very well served at its two extremes, with volumes providing a valuable historical overview of the subject and others concentrating on the performance history of a particular play. However, no individual volume provides an in-depth consideration of the stage histories of a number of plays, chosen for their particular significance within specific cultural contexts. Shakespeare in Stages addresses this gap. The original case studies explore significant anglophone performances of the plays, as well as ideas about 'Shakespeare', through the changing prisms of three different cultural factors that have proved influential in the way Shakespeare is staged: notions of authenticity, attitudes towards sex and gender, and questions of identity. Ranging from the 16th to the 21st centuries and examining productions of plays in Britain, USA, Canada, Australia, and South Africa, the studies focus attention on the complex interaction between particular plays, issues, events, and periods"--Provided by publisher.
505 8 $aMachine generated contents note: Introduction Christine Dymkowski and Christie Carson; Part I. Notions of Authenticity: 1. The move indoors Andrew Gurr; 2. Whig heroics: Shakespeare, Cibber, and the troublesome King John Elaine M. McGirr; 3. Coriolanus and the (in)authenticities of William Poel's platform stage Lucy Munro; 4. 'A fresh advance in Shakespearean production': Tyrone Guthrie in Canada Neil Carson; 5. Authenticity in the 21st century: Propeller and Shakespeare's Globe Abigail Rokison; Part II. Attitudes Towards Sex and Gender: 6. Performing beauty on the Renaissance stage Farah Karim-Cooper; 7. The artistic, cultural, and economic power of the actress in the age of Garrick Fiona Ritchie; 8. Women writing Shakespeare's women in the nineteenth century: The Winter's Tale Jan McDonald; 9. 'Not our Olivia': Lydia Lopokova and Twelfth Night Elizabeth Schafer; 10. Measure for Measure: Shakespeare's twentieth-century play Christine Dymkowski; Part III. Questions of Identity: 11. Shakespeare and the rhetoric of scenography 1770-1825 Christopher Baugh; 12. The presence of Shakespeare Susan Bennett; 13. Finding local habitation: Shakespeare's Dream at play on the stage of contemporary Australia Kate Flaherty and Penny Gay; 14. 'Haply for I am black': shifting race and gender dynamics in Talawa's Othello Lynette Goddard; 15. British directors in post-colonial South Africa Brian Pearce; Epilogue: Shakespeare's audiences as imaginative communities Christie Carson.
600 10 $aShakespeare, William,$d1564-1616$xStage history.
600 10 $aShakespeare, William,$d1564-1616$xDramatic production.
700 1 $aDymkowski, Christine,$d1950-
700 1 $aCarson, Christie.
856 42 $3Cover image$uhttp://assets.cambridge.org/97805218/84792/cover/9780521884792.jpg