In the modern world, references to Shakespeare frequently mark moments of catastrophe and of the accompanying longing for restoring social order, remedying injuries, and building strong communities. Shakespeare's moral authority has often been invoked to support artistic projects that claimed social justice as their goal on the assumption that drama has the power to manipulate perceptual reality. Drawing on cases from around the world, this book interrogates the idea that performing or reading Shakespeare has socially reparative value. It also acknowledges Shakespeare as a potential source of…mehr
In the modern world, references to Shakespeare frequently mark moments of catastrophe and of the accompanying longing for restoring social order, remedying injuries, and building strong communities. Shakespeare's moral authority has often been invoked to support artistic projects that claimed social justice as their goal on the assumption that drama has the power to manipulate perceptual reality. Drawing on cases from around the world, this book interrogates the idea that performing or reading Shakespeare has socially reparative value. It also acknowledges Shakespeare as a potential source of social well-being practices in the arts. The global framework shows that it is problematic to view Shakespeare as an impartial moral center.
This book proposes that reparative creativity, or remedial uses of the canon, can give artists and audiences more agency. Having a map of canonical texts' hidden ideologies can help readers, artists, and playgoers navigate its landscape, which is in itself a reparative act.
Alexa Alice Joubin is General Editor of The Shakespearean International Yearbook. She is Professor of English, Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Theatre, International Affairs, and East Asian Languages and Literatures at George Washington University in Washington, DC, USA, where she directs the Digital Humanities Institute. Natalia Khomenko is Co-Editor of The Shakespearean International Yearbook. She is a lecturer in English Literature at York University, Toronto, Canada. Her current research project focuses on the reception and interpretation of Shakespearean drama in Soviet Russia.
Inhaltsangabe
General Editor List of Contributors Preface Alexa Alice Joubin and Natalia Khomenko 1 Theorizing Social Reparation: Introduction to Reparative Global Shakespeare Alexa Alice Joubin and Natalia Khomenko Part I British Shakespeare and Soft Power 2 Shakespeare and International (Soft?) Power: Through the Lens of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust's Collections Helen A. Hopkins 3 Shakespearean Neverwheres: Victoria (BC), Anne Hathaway's Cottage, and Nostalgia for "Merry Olde England" Sarah Crover Part II Postcolonial Reparation 4 Hamlet in Kashmir, Hamlet as Kashmir: The Politics of Place in Vishal Bhardwaj's Haider (2014) Afreen Sen Chatterji 5 Can the Rwandese Speak?: European Colonial Legacy in Ben Proudfoot's Rwanda & Juliet (2016) Cynthia May Martin Part III Shakespeare and the Holocaust 6 Shylock and the Resentments of Jean Améry Richard Ashby 7 Repairing Generational Trauma Through Cordelia, Mein Kind: An Interview With Deborah Leiser-Moore Natalia Khomenko Part IV Political Mis/Appropriations 8 "A Language I Speak": Shakespearean Explorations in Portuguese, Argentine, and English Prisons Sheila T. Cavanagh and Maria Sequeira Mendes 9 Feeling With Othello: The Ethical Implications of Ideological Empathy Natalia Khomenko Part V Year in Review 10 Race and the "Global" in Shakespeare Studies Anandi Rao Index
General Editor List of Contributors Preface Alexa Alice Joubin and Natalia Khomenko 1 Theorizing Social Reparation: Introduction to Reparative Global Shakespeare Alexa Alice Joubin and Natalia Khomenko Part I British Shakespeare and Soft Power 2 Shakespeare and International (Soft?) Power: Through the Lens of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust's Collections Helen A. Hopkins 3 Shakespearean Neverwheres: Victoria (BC), Anne Hathaway's Cottage, and Nostalgia for "Merry Olde England" Sarah Crover Part II Postcolonial Reparation 4 Hamlet in Kashmir, Hamlet as Kashmir: The Politics of Place in Vishal Bhardwaj's Haider (2014) Afreen Sen Chatterji 5 Can the Rwandese Speak?: European Colonial Legacy in Ben Proudfoot's Rwanda & Juliet (2016) Cynthia May Martin Part III Shakespeare and the Holocaust 6 Shylock and the Resentments of Jean Améry Richard Ashby 7 Repairing Generational Trauma Through Cordelia, Mein Kind: An Interview With Deborah Leiser-Moore Natalia Khomenko Part IV Political Mis/Appropriations 8 "A Language I Speak": Shakespearean Explorations in Portuguese, Argentine, and English Prisons Sheila T. Cavanagh and Maria Sequeira Mendes 9 Feeling With Othello: The Ethical Implications of Ideological Empathy Natalia Khomenko Part V Year in Review 10 Race and the "Global" in Shakespeare Studies Anandi Rao Index
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