Today’s hotly contested debates about “sanctuary cities” would feel very familiar to someone living in Shakespeare’s London. In this piece, which is part of a larger forthcoming book project titled Shakespeare’s Sanctuary Cities, I argue that Shakespeare is fascinated by the dramatic possibilities inherent in an asylum space situated on the fault line of a jurisdictional battle. A refuge site sits between life and death. At the same time, Elizabethan sanctuary was a contradictory swirl of concepts: something both holy and debauched, something at the same time archaic and unpredictably present. Shakespeare’s use of a sanctuary in The Comedy of Errors is not a simple endorsement of Christian mercy. It is rather a deeper reflection on genre an...
The traditional view of Shakespeare’s mastery of the English language is alive and well today. This ...
International audienceWhether irreverent, excessively respectful, destructive or regenerative, the r...
This thesis re-examines Shakespeare’s creation of tragic character through the concept of ‘arrivals’...
This study weaves together several strands of inquiry. On the level of dramatic analysis, I look to ...
text"Shakespeare on the Verge: Rhetoric, Tragedy, and the Paradox of Place" describes the ideologica...
Ten radically altered versions of Shakespeare’s plays appeared on stage between 1678 and 1682, partl...
Looking back to the early modern period from the current immigration crisis, this article reads Shak...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
This thesis examines the material and metaphorical representations of actual physical geographic spa...
This article positions Misfortunes within the context of drama and literature offered as counsel. Su...
The Tempest is unusual in its epilogue. Instead of the actor stepping forward to discard his role an...
The account of the Christmas revels at Gray’s Inn in 1594, published after the fact and known as the...
The \u27place\u27 scholars have assigned to the stage in early modern London is as much a reflection...
This piece provides a discussion of the possibilities for civic Shakespeare in Verona as a privilege...
All’s Well That Ends Well is a complicated and disturbing play that has a comic ending, but which se...
The traditional view of Shakespeare’s mastery of the English language is alive and well today. This ...
International audienceWhether irreverent, excessively respectful, destructive or regenerative, the r...
This thesis re-examines Shakespeare’s creation of tragic character through the concept of ‘arrivals’...
This study weaves together several strands of inquiry. On the level of dramatic analysis, I look to ...
text"Shakespeare on the Verge: Rhetoric, Tragedy, and the Paradox of Place" describes the ideologica...
Ten radically altered versions of Shakespeare’s plays appeared on stage between 1678 and 1682, partl...
Looking back to the early modern period from the current immigration crisis, this article reads Shak...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
This thesis examines the material and metaphorical representations of actual physical geographic spa...
This article positions Misfortunes within the context of drama and literature offered as counsel. Su...
The Tempest is unusual in its epilogue. Instead of the actor stepping forward to discard his role an...
The account of the Christmas revels at Gray’s Inn in 1594, published after the fact and known as the...
The \u27place\u27 scholars have assigned to the stage in early modern London is as much a reflection...
This piece provides a discussion of the possibilities for civic Shakespeare in Verona as a privilege...
All’s Well That Ends Well is a complicated and disturbing play that has a comic ending, but which se...
The traditional view of Shakespeare’s mastery of the English language is alive and well today. This ...
International audienceWhether irreverent, excessively respectful, destructive or regenerative, the r...
This thesis re-examines Shakespeare’s creation of tragic character through the concept of ‘arrivals’...