Shakespeare thrives not only in the theatre, but also through what Bolter and Grusin call remediation. This article analyses how opera and musical reread Elizabethan drama shifting from spoken to sung discourse and travelling transnationally, temporally and across genres. Its main approach is comparative and relies on the history of mentalities. Rereading is dictated by cultural context, the conventions of the lyrical theatre, social and political factors and reception. Gender is reread in Bellini‘s I Capuleti e i Montecchi and in Britten‘s A Midsummer Night‟s Dream, and religion - in Gounod‘s Roméo et Juliette and Bernstein‘s West Side Story. Cultural and historical barriers enjoin recontextualisation: the English, French and Welsh verbal ...
The focus of this article is the new opera by Sergei Slonimsky, King Lear, based on the Shakespeare'...
This study analyzes William Shakespeare\u27s Romeo and Juliet (1596) and his Globe Theater as well a...
This article addresses recent developments in literary-critical studies of Shakespeare\u27s status w...
This article analyses Shakespeare’s literary discourse as an integral factor among the society where...
Over the past two decades or so, adaptation studies have provided ample and conclusive evidence abou...
I assert that we learn Shakespeare better when we study him against the adaptation. Some of the adap...
This study considers the ways in which Shakespeare’s plays have been adapted in cross-cultural conte...
“Tell it again, but different”: Gender, Race, and Adaptation in The Taming of the Shrew and Othello ...
In this article I will investigate why Shakespeare’s plays are sites of translationadaptation-approp...
All in all, the scholars whose papers are included in this issue of LINGUACULTURE come from differen...
Shakespeare’s works remain a reference when artists — either playwrights or stage professionals — ai...
The complexity if Shakespeare's language has been an object of study for many scholars over the cent...
This paper focuses on the genre of drolls as they were compiled in Francis Kirkman‘s collection The ...
This practice-led research paper interrogates the “afterlife” of Romeo and Juliet through focusing o...
“Love’s Labour’s Lost” – Shakespearean Libretto by W.H. Auden and Ch. KallmanThe article deals with ...
The focus of this article is the new opera by Sergei Slonimsky, King Lear, based on the Shakespeare'...
This study analyzes William Shakespeare\u27s Romeo and Juliet (1596) and his Globe Theater as well a...
This article addresses recent developments in literary-critical studies of Shakespeare\u27s status w...
This article analyses Shakespeare’s literary discourse as an integral factor among the society where...
Over the past two decades or so, adaptation studies have provided ample and conclusive evidence abou...
I assert that we learn Shakespeare better when we study him against the adaptation. Some of the adap...
This study considers the ways in which Shakespeare’s plays have been adapted in cross-cultural conte...
“Tell it again, but different”: Gender, Race, and Adaptation in The Taming of the Shrew and Othello ...
In this article I will investigate why Shakespeare’s plays are sites of translationadaptation-approp...
All in all, the scholars whose papers are included in this issue of LINGUACULTURE come from differen...
Shakespeare’s works remain a reference when artists — either playwrights or stage professionals — ai...
The complexity if Shakespeare's language has been an object of study for many scholars over the cent...
This paper focuses on the genre of drolls as they were compiled in Francis Kirkman‘s collection The ...
This practice-led research paper interrogates the “afterlife” of Romeo and Juliet through focusing o...
“Love’s Labour’s Lost” – Shakespearean Libretto by W.H. Auden and Ch. KallmanThe article deals with ...
The focus of this article is the new opera by Sergei Slonimsky, King Lear, based on the Shakespeare'...
This study analyzes William Shakespeare\u27s Romeo and Juliet (1596) and his Globe Theater as well a...
This article addresses recent developments in literary-critical studies of Shakespeare\u27s status w...