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The experience of one region over 25 years within the European
Union forms the basis of an examination of how the EU impacts on a
region's economy, on its society and on its own particular
problems. In the case of Northern Ireland, inclusion in the
European Union has coincided with the most sustained campaign of
political terrorism in western Europe. Specialist contributors to
this book consider what difference the European dimension has made
to the region over the quarter century since 1973.
Addressing both theoretical and practical questions surrounding
Shakespeare in contemporary Asia, this book asks why Shakespeare
has been of use in these vast regions of the world that have no
need to call on him. By investigating some of the ways Shakespeare
has been reinvented and deployed, the study notes the differences
between standard western approaches and those that can be seen in
Japan, China, India, and South East Asia. The contributors come
from a wide variety of backgrounds and traditions, West and East,
and present distinctive, and sometimes conflicting, views on topics
as diverse as speaking Shakespeare in Japanese, the importation and
exportation of Shakespeare in Asia, and the uses of the English
national poet in Indian film and Japanese popular culture. The
debates which occur within the book highlight the diversity of
production and reception for the world's most popular playwright,
whose work is now global cultural capital.
Spectators and audiences are everywhere in contemporary culture.
However, even in conventional performance, whether in the theatre,
in film or television, or at a sporting event, it is difficult to
discuss spectators with any authority, since each of us experiences
and understands the display in different ways and all methods of
analyzing spectators are flawed or unreliable. This book provides
instead a series of investigations into specific types of
performance activity, and how they relate to their audiences.
Specific topics discussed include the relationship of audiences to
the rise of the director, the avant-garde, tourism, gambling, the
effect of cinema on live performance and sport, including crowd
violence. Spectatorship is an area of increasing importance in the
field of theatre and performance studies, and this engaging study
is a valuable contribution to the development of thinking about
audiences and spectators.
Addressing both theoretical and practical questions surrounding
Shakespeare in contemporary Asia, this book asks why Shakespeare
has been of use in these vast regions of the world that have no
need to call on him. By investigating some of the ways Shakespeare
has been reinvented and deployed, the study notes the differences
between standard western approaches and those that can be seen in
Japan, China, India, and South East Asia. The contributors come
from a wide variety of backgrounds and traditions, West and East,
and present distinctive, and sometimes conflicting, views on topics
as diverse as speaking Shakespeare in Japanese, the importation and
exportation of Shakespeare in Asia, and the uses of the English
national poet in Indian film and Japanese popular culture. The
debates which occur within the book highlight the diversity of
production and reception for the world's most popular playwright,
whose work is now global cultural capital.
Spectators and audiences are everywhere in contemporary culture.
However, even in conventional performance, whether in the theatre,
in film or television, or at a sporting event, it is difficult to
discuss spectators with any authority, since each of us experiences
and understands the display in different ways and all methods of
analyzing spectators are flawed or unreliable. This book provides
instead a series of investigations into specific types of
performance activity, and how they relate to their audiences.
Specific topics discussed include the relationship of audiences to
the rise of the director, the avant-garde, tourism, gambling, the
effect of cinema on live performance and sport, including crowd
violence. Spectatorship is an area of increasing importance in the
field of theatre and performance studies, and this engaging study
is a valuable contribution to the development of thinking about
audiences and spectators.
This 2004 volume, with a foreword by Dennis Kennedy, addresses a
range of attitudes to Shakespeare's English history plays in
Britain and abroad from the early seventeenth century to the
present day. It concentrates on the play texts as well as
productions, translations and adaptations of them. The essays
explore the multiple points of intersection between the English
history they recount and the experience of British and other
national cultures, establishing the plays as genres not only
relevant to the political and cultural history of Britain but also
to the history of nearly every nation worldwide. The plays have had
a rich international reception tradition but critics and theatre
historians abroad, those practising 'foreign' Shakespeare, have
tended to ignore these plays in favour of the comedies and
tragedies. By presenting the British and foreign Shakespeare
traditions side by side, this volume seeks to promote a more finely
integrated world Shakespeare.
This 2004 volume, with a foreword by Dennis Kennedy, addresses a
range of attitudes to Shakespeare's English history plays in
Britain and abroad from the early seventeenth century to the
present day. It concentrates on the play texts as well as
productions, translations and adaptations of them. The essays
explore the multiple points of intersection between the English
history they recount and the experience of British and other
national cultures, establishing the plays as genres not only
relevant to the political and cultural history of Britain but also
to the history of nearly every nation worldwide. The plays have had
a rich international reception tradition but critics and theatre
historians abroad, those practising 'foreign' Shakespeare, have
tended to ignore these plays in favour of the comedies and
tragedies. By presenting the British and foreign Shakespeare
traditions side by side, this volume seeks to promote a more finely
integrated world Shakespeare.
The experience of one region over 25 years within the European
Union forms the basis of an examination of how the EU impacts on a
region's economy, on its society and on its particular problems. In
the case of Northern Ireland, inclusion in the European Union has
coincided with the most sustained campaign of political terrorism
in western Europe.
This is the first full treatment of Harley Granville Barker's
active work in the theatre. It sheds new light on the actor,
director, manager, playwright and critic who was one of the most
fascinating and versatile men of the twentieth-century stage, and
provides vivid accounts of the crucial productions of the time.
Granville Barker was the chief force in establishing a place in
Edwardian London for the 'New Drama' of Shaw and the European
playwrights, and he also became known for his revolutionary
productions of Shakespeare and Euripides. By 1915 he was generally
regarded as the most important theatre artist in England. Using
original documents and contemporary press reports, Dennis Kennedy
recreates the excitement of Granville Barker's accomplishment in
the context of an era that proved a turning-point for the arts in
general. The book is supported by more than forty photographs from
his theatre productions, most of them published here for the first
time since the Edwardian years.
Harley Granville Barker, one of the most versatile figures in
twentieth-century theatre, was the leader of the campaign to reform
the English stage in the Edwardian period. His work as an actor,
director, playwright, and manager set new standards of production
and gave Shaw his first successful showings; his later career as a
critic, after he abandoned the stage, opened new interpretations of
Shakespeare and led the way to the establishment of a national
theatre. This volume presents three of Granville Barker's best
plays: The Marrying of Ann Leete (about a young woman rebelling
against convention), The Voysey Inheritance (digging at
middle-class hypocrisy), and Waste (banned by the Lord Chamberlain,
the tragedy of a politician caught in a sexual trap). Written
between 1899 and 1907, and collected here for the first time in a
scholarly edition, they reveal Barker as an exciting, subtle and
innovative dramatist.
The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance is an unparalleled resource, providing comprehensive, authoritative, and up-to-date information about theatre and performance from ancient Greek theatre to the latest developments in London, Paris, New York, and around the globe. Written in accessible language, it will appeal broadly to readers interested in theatre and performance, from occasional playgoers to newspaper critics, students, and scholars.
Shakespeare has long been considered the pre-eminent poet and
dramatist of the English-speaking world. But although he is the
most frequently performed playwright in the world, little attention
has been paid to theatrical production of his plays outside the
English language. This is the first collection to offer a
considered account of contemporary Shakespeare performance in
non-English-speaking theatres. Most of the essays focus on Europe,
some on Asia. They investigate text and translation theory, the
significance of the visual, acting, directing and audience culture,
intercultural performance, political appropriation and dissent.
Dennis Kennedy introduces the topic within the context of postwar
performance, and his Afterword challenges Anglocentric standards of
Shakespeare interpretation.
The Oxford Companion to Theatre and Performance is based on the
celebrated Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, and
covers styles and movements, buildings, organizations, regions and
traditions; it has a particularly strong focus on biographies of
actors, playwrights, directors, and designers. New entries cover
the people and companies who have come into prominence since the
publication of the Encyclopedia. The Companion includes all the
most popular and accessible information from the Encyclopedia,
concentrating primarily on the personalities involved in producing
threatre, as well as overviews of the genres within which they
work. It has 2,400 entries presented in a far more compact and
portable format. The timeline of historical and cultural events in
the world of theatre and performance has been significantly
updated, along with the extensive bibliography, and an appendix of
useful weblinks has been added, which is supported and accessible
through a companion website. The Companion provides an informative
and accessible package aimed at both the theatre-going public as at
specialists and professionals in the field.
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