Despite numerous studies of the origins and meanings of Katherine’s shrewishness in Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew, no scholar has analyzed the role of disability in Katherine’s feelings of alienation and her ultimate transformation. In the wooing scene, we learn by indirection that Katherine has a limp through the references to the way she walks. This article analyzes the references to Katherine’s limp in adaptations of the play during the 17th and 18th centuries, considering the significance of retaining these references even when stage productions of the plays have not included representation of a disabled Katherine. The article then discusses the ways that visual representation of a disabled Katherine in performance might affe...
Katherine is an Elizabethan woman who is considered as a shrew because she fails in fulfilling the q...
Attitudes toward people with physical or mental disabilities have varied throughout history. Each so...
“Irregular” bodies—described as deformed, foul, ugly, maimed, crooked, limping, sick, and infected—a...
Despite numerous studies of the origins and meanings of Katherine\u27s shrewishness in Shakespeare\u...
This article reviews some instances of disability in Shakespeare's works and some instances of Disab...
In keeping with many disability theorists’ belief that disability is largely socially constructed, S...
This article examines Shakespeare’s Richard III as an important example of staging disability in ear...
The purpose of this article is to offer an historical reading of the character Richard/Gloucester in...
"Crip Estrangement: Shakespeare, Disability, Metatheatre" explores moments in Shakespeare when a non...
By attempting to discuss Richard’s psychology and resulting physical response of his deformity, this...
William Shakespeare's play, The Taming of the Shrew has a varied and interesting stage history. Begi...
This essay argues that King Lear presents a version of disability determined not by bodily auth...
This essay investigates William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar as a disability narrative...
This paper was originally written for Dr. Ronda Arab’s English 203 course Early Modern Literature. T...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814) has received a lot of modern critical attention specifically wit...
Katherine is an Elizabethan woman who is considered as a shrew because she fails in fulfilling the q...
Attitudes toward people with physical or mental disabilities have varied throughout history. Each so...
“Irregular” bodies—described as deformed, foul, ugly, maimed, crooked, limping, sick, and infected—a...
Despite numerous studies of the origins and meanings of Katherine\u27s shrewishness in Shakespeare\u...
This article reviews some instances of disability in Shakespeare's works and some instances of Disab...
In keeping with many disability theorists’ belief that disability is largely socially constructed, S...
This article examines Shakespeare’s Richard III as an important example of staging disability in ear...
The purpose of this article is to offer an historical reading of the character Richard/Gloucester in...
"Crip Estrangement: Shakespeare, Disability, Metatheatre" explores moments in Shakespeare when a non...
By attempting to discuss Richard’s psychology and resulting physical response of his deformity, this...
William Shakespeare's play, The Taming of the Shrew has a varied and interesting stage history. Begi...
This essay argues that King Lear presents a version of disability determined not by bodily auth...
This essay investigates William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar as a disability narrative...
This paper was originally written for Dr. Ronda Arab’s English 203 course Early Modern Literature. T...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814) has received a lot of modern critical attention specifically wit...
Katherine is an Elizabethan woman who is considered as a shrew because she fails in fulfilling the q...
Attitudes toward people with physical or mental disabilities have varied throughout history. Each so...
“Irregular” bodies—described as deformed, foul, ugly, maimed, crooked, limping, sick, and infected—a...