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From Shakespeare's religion to his wife to his competitors in the
world of early modern theatre, biographers have approached the
question of the Bard's life from numerous angles. Shakespeare &
Biography offers a fresh look at the biographical questions
connected with the famous playwright's life, through essays and
reflections written by prominent international scholars and
biographers.
Though better known for his literary merits, Shakespeare made
money, wrote about money and enabled money-making by countless
others in his name. With chapters by leading scholars on the
economic, financial and commercial ramifications of his work, this
multifaceted volume connects the Bard to both early modern and
contemporary economic conditions, revealing Shakespeare to have
been a serious economist in his own right.
At the heart of Christian theology lies a paradox unintelligible to
other religions and to secular humanism: that in the person of
Jesus, God became man, and suffered on the cross to effect
humanity's salvation. In his dual nature as mortal and divinity,
and unlike the impassable God of other monotheisms, Christ thus
became accessible to artistic representation. Hence the figure of
Jesus has haunted and compelled the imagination of artists and
writers for 2,000 years. This was never more so than in the 20th
Century, in a supposedly secular age, when the Jesus of popular
fiction and film became perhaps more familiar than the Christ of
the New Testament. In Re-Writing Jesus: Christ in 20th Century
Fiction and Film Graham Holderness explores how writers and
film-makers have sought to recreate Christ in work as diverse as
Anthony Burgess's Man of Nazareth and Jim Crace's Quarantine, to
Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ and Mel Gibson's
Passion of the Christ. These works are set within a longer and
broader history of 'Jesus novels' and 'Jesus films', a lineage
traced back to Ernest Renan and George Moore, and explored both for
their reflections of contemporary Christological debates, and their
positive contributions to Christian theology. In its final chapter,
the book draws on the insights of this tradition of Christological
representation to creatively construct a new life of Christ, an
original work of theological fiction that both subsumes the history
of the form, and offers a startlingly new perspective on the
biography of Christ.
Who was the real architect of the Gunpowder Plot? Who was the first
person to wear a Guy Fawkes mask? Why was Shakespeare's Dark Lady
dark? These and many other questions are answered in Graham
Holderness's new novel, which combines historical fiction,
psychological mystery and supernatural thriller in a highly
original and imaginative re-telling of the Gunpowder Plot. It is
1604. The Gunpowder Plotters are tunnelling under the palace of
Westminster, and confront an immovable obstacle. Guy Fawkes travels
to Europe to fetch help, and brings back more than he bargained
for. Who is the mysterious Dark Lady? Who is the man in the mask?
Why is London over-run by a plague of vampires, and who is going to
defeat them? From a Westminster vault to a Transylvanian mine, from
the crypt of Lambeth Palace to the under-stage of the Globe
theatre, Black and Deep Desires takes the reader on a tour of
historical, psychological and mythical underworlds, delving deep
into some of history's unexplored corridors, into the secret
thoughts of Catholic terrorists, and into the dark wellsprings of
Shakespeare's poetry. In Black and Deep Desires Graham Holderness
combines the expertise of an internationally-recognised Shakespeare
scholar, the narrative flair of his 2001 novel The Prince of
Denmark, and the poetic sensibility that won his verse collection
Craeft a Poetry Book Society award.
Shakespeare and Venice is the first book length study to describe
and chronicle the mythology of Venice that was formulated in the
Middle Ages and has persisted in fiction and film to the present
day. Graham Holderness focuses specifically on how that mythology
was employed by Shakespeare to explore themes of conversion,
change, and metamorphosis. Identifying and outlining the materials
having to do with Venice which might have been available to
Shakespeare, Holderness provides a full historical account of past
and present Venetian myths and of the city's relationship with both
Judaism and Islam. Holderness also provides detailed readings of
both The Merchant of Venice and of Othello against these mythical
and historical dimensions, and concludes with discussion of
Venice's relevance to both the modern world and to the past.
Shakespeare and Venice is the first book length study to describe
and chronicle the mythology of Venice that was formulated in the
Middle Ages and has persisted in fiction and film to the present
day. Graham Holderness focuses specifically on how that mythology
was employed by Shakespeare to explore themes of conversion,
change, and metamorphosis. Identifying and outlining the materials
having to do with Venice which might have been available to
Shakespeare, Holderness provides a full historical account of past
and present Venetian myths and of the city's relationship with both
Judaism and Islam. Holderness also provides detailed readings of
both The Merchant of Venice and of Othello against these mythical
and historical dimensions, and concludes with discussion of
Venice's relevance to both the modern world and to the past.
One of a series on Shakespeare's original texts, including
facsimile pages, this version of "Henry V" is claimed to be, in
some ways, the most authentic version of the play that we have.
Included are an introduction, notes, and a theoretical, historical
and contextual critique. The original text - or First Quarto - of
"Henry V", published in 1600, is missing the Chorus, a dramatic
device which recent criticism has used to suggest a strikingly
modern view of history and politics. These and other significant
changes mean that critics can no longer assume that the play
presents a distanced, ironic perspective on its own political and
military action. If Elizabethan audiences saw in performance
something closer to the First Folio than the 1623 Folio text, then
their dramatic engagement with history was of a kind very different
from that of the play's 20th-century interpreters. This new edition
makes available the original text of "Henry V", in all its
theatrical simplicity and historical difference.
The first in a series on Shakespeare's original texts, including
facsimile pages, this version of "Hamlet" is claimed to be, in some
ways, the most authentic version of the play that we have. Included
are an introduction, notes, and a theoretical, historical and
contextual critique. This text has been rejected by scholars as a
"bad Quarto" - corrupt and pirated text printed without the
permission of the playwright or his company. Nonetheless, it was
the first version of the play to be published and it has been
produced in the modern theatre with success. This new edition of
that Quarto seeks to acknowledge the play's distinctive poetic and
dramatic qualities, instead of comparing them unfavourably to one
of the other versions.
From Shakespeare's religion to his wife to his competitors in the
world of early modern theatre, biographers have approached the
question of the Bard's life from numerous angles. Shakespeare &
Biography offers a fresh look at the biographical questions
connected with the famous playwright's life, through essays and
reflections written by prominent international scholars and
biographers.
Though better known for his literary merits, Shakespeare made
money, wrote about money and enabled money-making by countless
others in his name. With chapters by leading scholars on the
economic, financial and commercial ramifications of his work, this
multifaceted volume connects the Bard to both early modern and
contemporary economic conditions, revealing Shakespeare to have
been a serious economist in his own right.
One of a series on Shakespeare's original texts, including
facsimile pages, this version of "Henry V" is claimed to be, in
some ways, the most authentic version of the play that we have.
Included are an introduction, notes, and a theoretical, historical
and contextual critique. The original text - or First Quarto - of
"Henry V", published in 1600, is missing the Chorus, a dramatic
device which recent criticism has used to suggest a strikingly
modern view of history and politics. These and other significant
changes mean that critics can no longer assume that the play
presents a distanced, ironic perspective on its own political and
military action. If Elizabethan audiences saw in performance
something closer to the First Folio than the 1623 Folio text, then
their dramatic engagement with history was of a kind very different
from that of the play's 20th-century interpreters. This new edition
makes available the original text of "Henry V", in all its
theatrical simplicity and historical difference.
Published in 1594, under the title The Taming of a Shrew, this play
has always been regarded as an earlier version by another
dramatist, or as a corrupt memorial reconstruction of Shakespeare's
The Taming of the Shrew. Yet the version accepted as Shakespeare's
was not published until the First Folio of 1623.
William Shakespeare stills stands head and shoulders above any
other author in the English language, a position that is unlikely
ever to change. Yet it is often said that we know very little about
him - and that applies as much to what he believed as it does to
the rest of his biography. Or does it? In this authoritative new
study, Graham Holderness takes us through the context of
Shakespeare's life, times of religious and political turmoil, and
looks at what we do know of Shakespeare the Anglican. But then he
goes beyond that, and mines the plays themselves, not just for the
words of the characters, but for the concepts, themes and language
which Shakespeare was himself steeped in - the language of the
Bible and the Book of Common Prayer. Considering particularly such
plays as Richard ll, Henry V, The Merchant of Venice, Measure for
Measure, Hamlet, Othello, The Tempest and The Winter's Tale,
Holderness shows how the ideas of Catholicism come up against those
of Luther and Calvin; how Christianity was woven deep into
Shakespeare's psyche, and how he brought it again and again to his
art.
At the heart of Christian theology lies a paradox unintelligible to
other religions and to secular humanism: that in the person of
Jesus, God became man, and suffered on the cross to effect
humanity's salvation. In his dual nature as mortal and divinity,
and unlike the impassable God of other monotheisms, Christ thus
became accessible to artistic representation. Hence the figure of
Jesus has haunted and compelled the imagination of artists and
writers for 2,000 years. This was never more so than in the 20th
Century, in a supposedly secular age, when the Jesus of popular
fiction and film became perhaps more familiar than the Christ of
the New Testament. In Re-Writing Jesus: Christ in 20th Century
Fiction and Film Graham Holderness explores how writers and
film-makers have sought to recreate Christ in work as diverse as
Anthony Burgess's Man of Nazareth and Jim Crace's Quarantine, to
Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ and Mel Gibson's
Passion of the Christ. These works are set within a longer and
broader history of 'Jesus novels' and 'Jesus films', a lineage
traced back to Ernest Renan and George Moore, and explored both for
their reflections of contemporary Christological debates, and their
positive contributions to Christian theology. In its final chapter,
the book draws on the insights of this tradition of Christological
representation to creatively construct a new life of Christ, an
original work of theological fiction that both subsumes the history
of the form, and offers a startlingly new perspective on the
biography of Christ.
The first in a series on Shakespeare's original texts, including
facsimile pages, this version of "Hamlet" is claimed to be, in some
ways, the most authentic version of the play that we have. Included
are an introduction, notes, and a theoretical, historical and
contextual critique. This text has been rejected by scholars as a
"bad Quarto" - corrupt and pirated text printed without the
permission of the playwright or his company. Nonetheless, it was
the first version of the play to be published and it has been
produced in the modern theatre with success. This new edition of
that Quarto seeks to acknowledge the play's distinctive poetic and
dramatic qualities, instead of comparing them unfavourably to one
of the other versions.
Essays discussing the concept of globalisation as present in works
of art and literature. Like Freud's `civilisation', globalisation
is both cause and consequence of its own discontents, visible at
times only in the resistances it generates. Study of the phenomenon
has until recently been confined largely to economists and
political and social scientists. The present volume brings a range
of literary and cultural analyses to bear to demonstrate both its
actual time-depth and the all-encompassing nature of its influences
on culture and consciousness. The English language and English
literature have been major elements in its forging, underwriting
first British and then American cultural hegemony. Unlike most
readings of globalisation, these essays depict notan irresistible
juggernaut but a process that, in generating its own resistances,
opens up the possibility of an alternative world order founded not
on the inequities of power and capital, but on shared commitment to
a fragile planet and a common and universal culture. Ranging from
Homer to Michael Crichton, Shakespeare to Suleyman Al-Bassam, John
Donne to Les Murray, John Keats to Derek Walcott, Conrad, Gissing
and Edward Lear to V. S. Naipauland Salman Rushdie, and addressing,
among many others, writers as diverse as Paul Valery and Edouard
Glissant, Gertrude Stein and Wallace Stevens, George Orwell, Martha
Gellhorn and Storm Jameson, Eliot, Yeats and Auden, Seamus Heaney
and Paul Muldoon, these essays explore a remarkable range of
responses to the process of globalisation from earliest times to
the present day. Contributors: STAN SMITH, GRAHAM HOLDERNESS, BRYAN
LOUGHREY, JENNIFER BIRKETT, PHYLLIS LASSNER, SHARON OUDITT, TONY
SHARPE, EDWARD LARRISSY, MICHAEL MURPHY, LIAM CONNELL
In this engaging new book, writer and critic Graham Holderness
shows how a classic Shakespeare play can be the source for a modern
story, providing a creative 'collision' between the Shakespeare
text and contemporary concerns. Using an analogy from particle
physics, Holderness tests his methodology through specific
examples, structured in four parts: a recreation of performances of
Hamlet and Richard II aboard the East India Company ship the Red
Dragon in 1607; an imagined encounter between Shakespeare and Ben
Jonson writing the King James Bible; the creation of a contemporary
folk hero based on Coriolanus and drawing on films such as Skyfall
and The Hurt Locker; and an account of the terrorist bombing at a
performance of Twelfth Night in Qatar in 2005. These pieces of
narrative and drama are interspersed with literary criticism, each
using a feature of the original Shakespeare play or its performance
to illuminate the extraordinary elasticity of Shakespeare. The
'tales' provoke questions about what we understand to be
Shakespeare and not-Shakespeare, making the book of vital interest
to students, scholars, and enthusiasts of Shakespeare, literary
criticism and creative writing.
Sulayman Al Bassam is one of the world's leading contemporary
dramatists. His adaptations of Shakespeare, performed around the
world, have won many awards and met with widespread acclaim on four
continents. This volume brings together for the first time three of
Al Bassam's adaptations of Shakespearean plays - including versions
of Hamlet, Richard III and Twelfth Night - collectively known as
The Arab Shakespeare Trilogy. The al-Hamlet Summit sees the
familiar characters of Hamlet reborn as delegates placed in a
conference room in an unnamed modern Arab state on the brink of
war; Richard III: an Arab Tragedy is a contemporary adaptation of
Shakespeare's classic, reworked and transplanted into the scorching
oil-rich Islamic world of the Gulf; while The Speaker's Progress is
a forensic reconstruction of Twelfth Night which transforms into an
unequivocal act of defiance towards the state, forming a dark
satire on the decades of hopelessness and political inertia that
fed twenty-first-century revolts across the Arab region.The Arab
Shakespeare Trilogy features an editorial introduction and
annotation by Graham Holderness, positioning the plays within the
contexts of both modern Shakespearean drama and Arab culture as
well as an author's preface by Sulayman Al Bassam, detailing the
plays' history of theatrical reception and outlining his philosophy
of Shakespeare adaptation.
Almost everything of interest in Anglo-Saxon history is recorded in
the poetry of the period: the historical and political, moral and
ethical, theological and ecclesiastical, military and
constitutional motives and preoccupations of that past culture are
there to be read at the level of individual perception and personal
experience. In this study Graham Holderness brings these Old
English texts and the culture they embody within the reach of the
general reader by providing powerful new translations of heroic,
elegiac, religious and love verses, translations which span the
corpus from Beowulf to The Wife's Lament and bridge the gap between
the unfamiliar language of their original composition and the
modern English in which they are subsequently discussed and lucidly
explained. As a general introduction to the subject this book opens
up the language, literature and life of Anglo-Saxon England to the
non-specialist, ending with a line by line, sample translation and
detailed annotation as an impetus to further study.
The room is set up like a conference hall somewhere in the Arab
world, or perhaps like the legislative assembly of a small modern
state. There are desks with push-button microphones and headsets.
Behind, there is a screen, as if someone planned to give a
Powerpoint presentation. But the names on the desks are the
familiar characters from "Hamlet". The setting of Sulayman Al
Bassam's powerful, disturbing version of the "Hamlet" story is a
modern Middle-Eastern state whose old king has just died, to be
replaced by his brother, a ruthless, westernised dictator who has
married the old king's wife to legitimise his rule, and calls his
regime a "new democracy".
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