"The Tempest" and Its TravelsPeter Hulme, William Howard Sherman University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000 - 319 páginas The Tempest is a play whose meanings and influence have crossed multiple boundaries in the critical sphere. It is probably the work of Shakespeare's that has been reinterpreted more radically and fully than any other by readers, writers, and artists throughout the modern world. At once resistant and ever-subjected to classification, it has been identified as every genre and no genre, located in every place and no place, and viewed from a wide range of perspectives from colonial to anticolonial, political to apolitical. In "The Tempest" and Its Travels, Peter Hulme and William H. Sherman assemble a stellar collection of original essays and visual materials that situate Shakespeare's play in both its original contexts and our own cultural moment. The book launches out to explore the historical circumstances in which The Tempest was written and performed in seventeenth-century England, particularly in the emerging global market economy. Reading outward, the volume moves through the crossroads of Europe and the Mediterranean, exploring the play's complex transactions between European and North African cultures and between classical texts and Renaissance politics. In a final section, the book traverses the Atlantic for a look at American and Caribbean readings of the play and its translation into colonial allegory. By means of its innovative collection of historical, critical, and creative materials, "The Tempest" and Its Travels offers a new map of the vast and varied worlds--scholarly, artistic, and political--from which the play arose and in which it has, for centuries, been received. Contributors: Ric Alsopp, Christy Anderson, Crystal Bartolovich, Gordon Brotherton, Jerry Brotton, Raquel Carrió, Merle Collins, Philip Crispin, David Dabydeen, Elizabeth Fowler, John Gillies, Roland Greene, Donna B. Hamilton, Andrew C. Hess, Peter Hulme, Robin Kirkpatrick, Barbara A. Mowat, Lucy Rix, Joseph Roach, Patricia Seed, Martha Nell Smith, Alden T. Vaughan, Marina Warner. |
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... by Hilda Aldington . Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation , agent for Perdita Schaffner . Cloth ISBN : 0-8122-3582-7 Paperback ISBN : 0-8122-1753-5 Contents Notes on the Editors and Contributors viii Preface xi.
Peter Hulme, William Howard Sherman. Contents Notes on the Editors and Contributors viii Preface xi PETER HULME AND WILLIAM H. SHERMAN Prologue : ' After Prospero ' xv ROBIN KIRKPATRICK I LOCAL KNOWLEDGE Introduction 3 1 ' Baseless ...
... DABYDEEN Envoy : ' The Word - In the Beginning ' 265 MERLE COLLINS References 269 Further Reading 308 Acknowledgements 312 Photographic Acknowledgements 313 Index 314 Notes on the Editors and Contributors Ric Allsopp is a.
Peter Hulme, William Howard Sherman. Notes on the Editors and Contributors Ric Allsopp is a joint editor of the international journal Performance Research and founding partner of Writing Research ... Notes on the Editors and Contributors.
... at Northwestern University , Illinois , and the Department of Performance Studies at New York University . He is the author of The Player's Passion : Studies in the Science of Acting NOTES ON THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS ix.
Contenido
Introduction | xviii |
Baseless Fabric London as a World City | 13 |
Knowing I loved my books Reading The Tempest Intertextually | 27 |
The Ship Adrift | 37 |
Wild Waters Hydraulics and the Forces of Nature | 41 |
Trinculos Indian American Natives in Shakespeares England | 49 |
The Enchanted Island Vicarious Tourism in Restoration Adaptations of The Tempest | 60 |
Introduction | 73 |
Tempests at Terra Nova Theatre Institute | 162 |
Introduction | 171 |
The Figure of the New World in The Tempest | 180 |
This islands mine Caliban and Native Sovereignty | 202 |
Arielismo and Anthropophagy The Tempest in Latin America | 212 |
Reading from Elsewhere George Lamming and the Paradox of Exile | 220 |
Maintaining the State of Emergencey Aimé Césaires Vne tempête | 236 |
HDs The Tempest | 250 |
The Italy of The Tempest | 78 |
The foul witch and Her freckled whelp Circean Mutations in the New World | 97 |
ReEngineering Virgil The Tempest and the Printed English Aeneid | 114 |
The Mediterranean and Shakespeares Geopolitical Imagination | 121 |
Carthage and Tunis The Tempest and Tapestries | 132 |
Island Logic | 138 |
Césaires Une tempête at The Gate | 149 |
Otra Tempestad at The Globe | 157 |
Hogarth and the Canecutter | 257 |
Envoy | 265 |
269 | |
Further Reading | 308 |
Acknowledgements | 312 |
Photographic Acknowledgements | 313 |
314 | |