The Tempest and Its TravelsReaktion Books, 2000 - 319 páginas One of Shakespeare s final plays, The Tempest is often considered a jewel in the canon of English literature. Mythic, impassioned characters dictate the action, all of which takes place on a moody, windswept island far from the shores of Great Britain. 'The Tempest' and Its Travels considers the rich legacy of this play s productions abroad. Distinguished contributors explore The Tempest s contemporary translations at the hands of actors, directors, and writers from the Mediterranean to the Caribbean to North and South America. Matching the eclectic nature of the play itself, 'The Tempest' and Its Travels departs from traditional casebook models, bringing together an innovative collection of critical and creative readings, as well as historical images of the play s productions. The book will provide fruitful reading for scholars and students in a variety of disciplines. This is an ambitious, bold, and imaginative collection that truly becomes something greater than even the sum of its impressive parts. David Scott Kastan, Columbia University" |
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... called a feathered fowler - wears only a scanty drape knotted on his shoulders and a crest of feathers on his head , bran- dishes two fanciful long - tailed birds and is flanked by two foliate herms with bows and arrows and hunting dogs ...
... called a feathered fowler - wears only a scanty drape knotted on his shoulders and a crest of feathers on his head , bran- dishes two fanciful long - tailed birds and is flanked by two foliate herms with bows and arrows and hunting dogs ...
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... called simply ' the Strachey letter ' ) , found its way to Shakespeare , possibly through his association with members of the Virginia Company.14 The verbal parallels in the Strachey letter thus provide the most immedi- ate evidence for ...
... called simply ' the Strachey letter ' ) , found its way to Shakespeare , possibly through his association with members of the Virginia Company.14 The verbal parallels in the Strachey letter thus provide the most immedi- ate evidence for ...
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Contenido
London as a World City | 15 |
Reading The Tempest Intertextually | 29 |
3 The Ship Adrift | 39 |
Hydraulics and the Forces of Nature | 43 |
American Natives in Shakespeares England | 51 |
Vicarious Tourism in Restoration Adaptations of The Tempest | 62 |
Introduction | 75 |
7 The Italy of The Tempest | 80 |
Introduction | 173 |
13 The Figure of the New World in The Tempest | 182 |
Caliban and Native Sovereignty | 204 |
The Tempest in Latin America | 214 |
George Lamming and the Paradox of Exile | 222 |
Aimé Césaires Une tempête | 238 |
18 HDs The Tempest | 252 |
19 Hogarth and the Canecutter | 259 |
Circean Mutations in the New World | 99 |
The Tempest and the Printed English Aeneid | 116 |
10 The Mediterranean and Shakespeares Geopolitical Imagination | 123 |
11 Carthage and Tunis The Tempest and Tapestries | 134 |
12 Island Logic | 140 |
Cesaires Une tempete at The Gate | 151 |
Otra Tempestad at The Globe | 159 |
Tempests at Terra Nova Theatre Institute | 164 |
The Word In the Beginning | 267 |
References | 271 |
Further Reading | 310 |
314 | |
315 | |
316 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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