Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 From popular entertainment to literature
- 2 Shakespeare abbreviated
- 3 Shakespearean stars: stagings of desire
- 4 Shakespeare illustrated
- 5 Shakespeare: myth and biographical fiction
- 6 Narration and staging in Hamlet and its afternovels
- 7 Shakespeare serialized: An Age of Kings
- 8 Musical Shakespeares: attending to Ophelia, Juliet, and Desdemona
- 9 Shakespeare overheard: performances, adaptations, and citations on radio
- 10 Shakespeare on the tourist trail
- 11 Performing Shakespeare in digital culture
- 12 Shakespeare’s popular face: from the playbill to the poster
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 From popular entertainment to literature
- 2 Shakespeare abbreviated
- 3 Shakespearean stars: stagings of desire
- 4 Shakespeare illustrated
- 5 Shakespeare: myth and biographical fiction
- 6 Narration and staging in Hamlet and its afternovels
- 7 Shakespeare serialized: An Age of Kings
- 8 Musical Shakespeares: attending to Ophelia, Juliet, and Desdemona
- 9 Shakespeare overheard: performances, adaptations, and citations on radio
- 10 Shakespeare on the tourist trail
- 11 Performing Shakespeare in digital culture
- 12 Shakespeare’s popular face: from the playbill to the poster
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
In recent years, the study of the past and present relationships between Shakespeare and popular culture has been transformed: from an occasional, ephemeral, and anecdotal field of research, which, if it registered at all, was generally considered peripheral to the core concerns of scholarship and pedagogy, to one which is making an increasingly significant contribution to our understanding of how Shakespeare's works came into being, and of how and why they continue to exercise the imaginations of readers, theatergoers, viewers, and scholars worldwide. A range of factors have prompted this shift, among them the increased priority afforded to theatrical performance; the growth of interest in Shakespeare on film and television; the theoretical debates and methodological innovations of the 1980s and 1990s, which have encouraged new kinds of interdisciplinarity in the field of Shakespeare studies, as well as turning attention to the larger forces that have shaped Shakespearean production and reproduction in material culture; the condition of postmodernity itself, in which traditional distinctions between high and low culture have been eroded; and, not least, the changing patterns of educational participation and provision that have characterized the end of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first. Contemporary research and pedagogy in the field of Shakespeare and popular culture is concerned with the Shakespearean theatre and drama's immersion within the festivities and folk customs, entertainment industries, and traditions of playing of its own time; it is also interested in the reinvention, adaptation, citation, and appropriation of the plays (and, to a lesser extent, the poems), and the myths and histories that circulate around them, across a wide range of media in subsequent periods and cultures.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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