UID:
almafu_9959230179102883
Format:
xi, 233 p.
Edition:
1st ed.
ISBN:
1-134-64732-8
,
1-134-64733-6
,
1-280-33210-7
,
0-203-02565-2
,
0-203-15959-4
Content:
Repositioning Shakespeare offers an original assessment of a broad range of texts and cultural events that appropriate Shakespeare. Examining these materials within the context of 'the nation' in a postcolonial era, Thomas Cartelli considers: * essays by Walt Whitman * the nineteenth-century play, 'Jack Cade' * novels by Aphra Behn, Ngugi Wa Thiong'o, Michelle Cliff, Tayeb Salih, Nadine Gordimer and Robert Stone * the 1849 Astor Place Riot Cartelli places particular emphasis on redefining the 'postcolonial' in order to find a place for America. In doing so, Repositioning Shakespeare makes a considerable contribution to the continuing debate about the uses we make of Shakespeare.
Note:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
,
chapter Introduction -- part PART I Democratic vistas -- chapter 1 Nativism, nationalism, and the common man in American constructions of Shakespeare -- chapter 2 Shakespeare at Hull House: Jane Addams's -- chapter 3 Shakespeare, 1916: Caliban by the Yellow Sands and the new dramas of democracy -- part PART II Prospero's books -- chapter 4 Prospero in Africa: The Tempest as colonialist text and pretext -- chapter 5 After The Tempest: Shakespeare, postcoloniality, and Michelle Cliff's new, New World Miranda -- part PART III The Othello complex -- chapter 6 Enslaving the Moor: Othello, Oroonoko, and the recuperation of intractability -- chapter 7.
,
English
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-415-19134-3
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-415-19498-9
Language:
English
DOI:
10.4324/9780203025659