Since the start of the 21st century, modern popular culture has become fascinated by Shakespeare's star-crossed lovers and has heralded the pair as both quintessentially doomed and as the perfect example of true love. Perhaps then it is unsurprising that they continue to inspire numerous appropriations and adaptations of Shakespeare‘s original play; these are dominated, however, by texts that are far less literary than academia likes to admit. Internet crowd-sourcing, the 'most vilified' romance novel, and graphic novels are just a few of the new and inspired ways in which today's culture engages with Romeo and Juliet and which, it can be argued, engage with the play far more successfully than current academic criticism. This thesis engages...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
In a culture in which “high” literary culture has become a “popular” enterprise, why is it that peop...
In recent years, the 'Popular Shakespeare' phenomenon has become ever more pervasive: whether in fri...
This book offers a timely examination of the relationship between Shakespeare and contemporary digit...
In our present mediascape, performances of Shakespeare on social networks proliferate. Changing Mode...
Significant changes and advances in technology in the twenty-first century, and the rapid evolution ...
The convergence of textuality and multimedia in the twenty-first century signals a profound shift in...
The thesis focuses on how literary texts of the so called "great tradition" can become parts of cont...
Four hundred years after William Shakespeare’s death, his works continue to not only fill playhouses...
Literature is always in a state of evolution. Words change; the way writers write changes. Even actu...
The book is an exploration of recent, experimental adaptations of Shakespeare on film, TV, and the w...
A collection of recent adaptations of four of Shakespeare’s most famous plays (A Midsummer Night’s D...
This article examines the representation of readerly affect in scenes from five Shakespeare plays (L...
The book is an exploration of recent, experimental adaptations of Shakespeare on film, TV, and the w...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
In a culture in which “high” literary culture has become a “popular” enterprise, why is it that peop...
In recent years, the 'Popular Shakespeare' phenomenon has become ever more pervasive: whether in fri...
This book offers a timely examination of the relationship between Shakespeare and contemporary digit...
In our present mediascape, performances of Shakespeare on social networks proliferate. Changing Mode...
Significant changes and advances in technology in the twenty-first century, and the rapid evolution ...
The convergence of textuality and multimedia in the twenty-first century signals a profound shift in...
The thesis focuses on how literary texts of the so called "great tradition" can become parts of cont...
Four hundred years after William Shakespeare’s death, his works continue to not only fill playhouses...
Literature is always in a state of evolution. Words change; the way writers write changes. Even actu...
The book is an exploration of recent, experimental adaptations of Shakespeare on film, TV, and the w...
A collection of recent adaptations of four of Shakespeare’s most famous plays (A Midsummer Night’s D...
This article examines the representation of readerly affect in scenes from five Shakespeare plays (L...
The book is an exploration of recent, experimental adaptations of Shakespeare on film, TV, and the w...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
In a culture in which “high” literary culture has become a “popular” enterprise, why is it that peop...