This dissertation explores the performance of Shakespeare by Irish theatre practitioners in Ireland and England at a time of significant biopolitical, social, and legislative change (2014-2018), and as such, approaches such performances through the lens of gender, queerness, and feminisms. Notions, performances, and debates around gender and sexuality shape much of current Irish society, and I contend that this extends towards Shakespeare performance. I also propose that such performances of gender and sexuality are also intertwined with performances and invocations of Irishness, national identity, and Anglo-Irish cultural exchange. Using archival and theoretical methodologies, I display the different forms that Irish Shakespeare takes on I...
This thesis is powered by a seemingly simple question: how has the presentation of masculinity chang...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine how the turbulent changes within the Irish society affected...
Book synopsis: In the expansive and expanding field of Irish studies, performance has typically feat...
2015-05-03This dissertation examines the relation between theatre, culture and performance in contem...
This dissertation examines theatre and film in Ireland between 1988 and 2005, focusing on the plays ...
This dissertation examines appropriations of five of Shakespeare’s tragedies (King Lear, Macbeth, Ot...
William Shakespeare’s comedy The Taming of the Shrew is a curious and often controversial play due t...
This dissertation explores the relations between various strands of Irish nationalism and the homoso...
261 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Chapter One, the introduction...
My dissertation explores postcolonial implications of performances in Brian Friel\u27s plays. While ...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the earliest Irish adaptations of Shakespeare and to consider ...
Irish theatre and its histories typically appear dominated by men and their actions. Drawing on the ...
This dissertation analyzes the ways in which a few theater companies at the turn of the millennium h...
This dissertation analyzes four contemporary theatrical productions of two canonical Jacobean plays:...
Summary of Contents: Provoking Performance: Challenging the People, the State and the Patriarchy in ...
This thesis is powered by a seemingly simple question: how has the presentation of masculinity chang...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine how the turbulent changes within the Irish society affected...
Book synopsis: In the expansive and expanding field of Irish studies, performance has typically feat...
2015-05-03This dissertation examines the relation between theatre, culture and performance in contem...
This dissertation examines theatre and film in Ireland between 1988 and 2005, focusing on the plays ...
This dissertation examines appropriations of five of Shakespeare’s tragedies (King Lear, Macbeth, Ot...
William Shakespeare’s comedy The Taming of the Shrew is a curious and often controversial play due t...
This dissertation explores the relations between various strands of Irish nationalism and the homoso...
261 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Chapter One, the introduction...
My dissertation explores postcolonial implications of performances in Brian Friel\u27s plays. While ...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the earliest Irish adaptations of Shakespeare and to consider ...
Irish theatre and its histories typically appear dominated by men and their actions. Drawing on the ...
This dissertation analyzes the ways in which a few theater companies at the turn of the millennium h...
This dissertation analyzes four contemporary theatrical productions of two canonical Jacobean plays:...
Summary of Contents: Provoking Performance: Challenging the People, the State and the Patriarchy in ...
This thesis is powered by a seemingly simple question: how has the presentation of masculinity chang...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine how the turbulent changes within the Irish society affected...
Book synopsis: In the expansive and expanding field of Irish studies, performance has typically feat...