Women Making Shakespeare: Text, Reception and Performance
By (Author) Professor Gordon McMullan
Edited by Professor Lena Cowen Orlin
Edited by Professor Virginia Mason Vaughan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
The Arden Shakespeare
28th November 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
822.33
Paperback
384
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
376g
Women Making Shakespeare presents a series of 20-25 short essays that draw on a variety of resources, including interviews with directors, actors, and other performance practitioners, to explore the place (or constitutive absence) of women in the Shakespearean text and in the history of Shakespearean reception - the many ways women, working individually or in communities, have shaped and transformed the reception, performance, and teaching of Shakespeare from the 17th century to the present. The book highlights the essential role Shakespeare's texts have played in the historical development of feminism. Rather than a traditional collection of essays, Women Making Shakespeare brings together materials from diverse resources and uses diverse research methods to create something new and transformative. Among the many women's interactions with Shakespeare to be considered are acting (whether on the professional stage, in film, on lecture tours, or in staged readings), editing, teaching, academic writing, and recycling through adaptations and appropriations (film, novels, poems, plays, visual arts).
In thirty-three brief chapters, this collection will astonish its reader with how many different ways women as performers, directors, editors, booksellers are inseparable from the Shakespeare industry. -- Roland Greene, Stanford University * Recent Studies in Tudor and Stuart Drama *
Gordon McMullan is Professor of English, King's College London UK Lena Cowen Orlin is Professor of English, Georgetown University, USA Virginia Mason Vaughan is Professor of English at Clark University, Worcester, USA.