Available Formats
Shakespeare's Creative Legacies: Artists, Writers, Performers, Readers
By (Author) Dr Peter Holbrook
Edited by Dr Paul Edmondson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
The Arden Shakespeare
11th August 2016
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
Literary studies: general
822.33
Hardback
200
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
458g
We celebrate Shakespeare as a creator of plays and poems, characters and ideas, words and worlds. But so too, in the four centuries since his death in 1616, have thinkers, writers, artists and performers recreated him. Readers of this book are invited to explore Shakespeares afterlife on the stage and on the screen, in poetry, fiction, music and dance, as well as in cultural and intellectual life. A series of concise introductory essays are here combined with personal reflections by prominent contemporary practitioners of the arts. At once a celebration and a critical response, the book explores Shakespeare as a global cultural figure who continues to engage artists, audiences and readers of all kinds. Includes contributions from: John Ashbery, Shaul Bassi, Simon Russell Beale, Sally Beamish, David Bintley, Michael Bogdanov, Kenneth Branagh, Debra Ann Byrd, John Caird, Antoni Cimolino, Wendy Cope, Gregory Doran, Margaret Drabble, Dominic Dromgoole, Ellen Geer, Michael Holroyd, Gordon Kerry, John Kinsella, Juan Carlos Liberti, Lachlan Mackinnon, David Malouf, Javier Maras, Yukio Ninagawa, Janet Suzman, Salley Vickers, Rowan Williams, Lisa Wolpe, Greg Wyatt. All proceeds from the sale of this volume will be donated to the International Shakespeare Association, to support the study and appreciation of Shakespeare around the world.
Here, in a book Stanley Wells (in his foreword) calls a book of enthusiasms, readers will find little academic lucubration or sententious pomp. This books contributors exert themselves largely in praise, and the qualities of the individual writers lend imaginative power to the task. Readers will find new insights in one or more of the seven essays that make up part 1, the titles of which all begin Shakespeare and. These essays deal with theater, poetry, music, dance, opera, the novel, and film and television. This reviewer found the essay on music of particular interest. These chapters are followed a section of testimonials from 27 distinguished individuals who feel indebted to Shakespeare, including John Ashbery, Kenneth Branagh, Margaret Drabble, Michael Holroyd, and Rowan Williams. Though this sequence of pleasant reflections somewhat resembles a list of customer reviews on a commercial website, the views of these gifted individuals carry real weight in this book, reminding readers of Shakespeares impact over the generations. Indira Ghose provides a brief closing chapter on Shakespeares storytelling, and the book concludes with a sonnet by Edmondson. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals; general readers. * CHOICE *
An excellent example of the kind of insight, and pleasure, that can be generated when scholars and artists think together. * Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 *
Peter Holbrook is Professor of Shakespeare and English Renaissance Literature at the University of Queensland, Australia, and Chair of the International Shakespeare Association. Paul Edmondson is is Head of Research and Knowledge for the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, Stratford-upon-Avon, UK and and Director of the Stratford-upon-Avon Poetry Festival.