Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes of Contributors
- Introduction
- Shakespeare, Africa & the Globe Olympiad
- The Two Geltlemen of Zimbabwe & their Diaspora Audience at Shakespeare's Globe
- Shakespeare's African Nostos Township nostalgia & South African performance at sea
- Ìtàn Ògìnìntìn, The Winter's Tale Shakespeare meets Yoruba gods
- Performing the Nation at the London Globe – Notes on a South Sudanese Cymbeline ‘We will be like other people in other places’
- African Shakespeares – a Discussion
- ‘Sa bezsominn Shakespeare la’ – The Brave New World of Dev Virahsawmy
- Crioulo Shakespeareano & the Creolising of King Lear
- Playscript
- Book Reviews
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes of Contributors
- Introduction
- Shakespeare, Africa & the Globe Olympiad
- The Two Geltlemen of Zimbabwe & their Diaspora Audience at Shakespeare's Globe
- Shakespeare's African Nostos Township nostalgia & South African performance at sea
- Ìtàn Ògìnìntìn, The Winter's Tale Shakespeare meets Yoruba gods
- Performing the Nation at the London Globe – Notes on a South Sudanese Cymbeline ‘We will be like other people in other places’
- African Shakespeares – a Discussion
- ‘Sa bezsominn Shakespeare la’ – The Brave New World of Dev Virahsawmy
- Crioulo Shakespeareano & the Creolising of King Lear
- Playscript
- Book Reviews
Summary
For Shakespeare, Africa was a place at the far end of imagination where men might grow into devils, freakish monstrosities or flawed and noble heroes, and the land was a space of wonder and magical beauty. In the nineteenth century missionaries sought to use Shakespeare as part of the ‘civilising mission’ and as one of Ngugi wa Thiong'o's ‘cultural bombs’, to teach English and inculcate an idea of the superiority of English culture. However, in the process, generations of Africans came to ‘own’ Shakespeare as part of their hybrid consciousness. Consequently Shakespeare was appropriated. His imagined spaces – ‘fair Verona’, and times – ancient Rome and Greece, could easily be reimagined as African. In postcolonial times many of Africa's most eminent playwrights, Dev Virahsawmy, Femi Osofisan and Tsegaye Gebre-Medhin among them, have taken Shakespeare's plays and made translations, adaptations and tradaptations for their own aesthetic and sociopolitical purposes. A fair amount has been written about Shakespeare and Africa, from the first production by presumably homesick sailors in Sierra Leone in 1607, the school productions of colonial Anglophone Africa, to such seminal translations as those in the 1960s by Tanzania's first president, Julius Nyerere, of Julius Caesar and The Merchant of Venice, to prove the linguistic sophistication of Kiswahili.
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- Information
- African Theatre 12Shakespeare in and out of Africa, pp. x - xivPublisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013