This article examines Shakespeare’s Richard III as an important example of staging disability in early modern drama. Although Richard’s character is taken by theorists as emblematic of premodern notions of disability, this article reads Richard instead as a “dismodern” subject who employs rhetorical power and performative ability to compensate for a bodily form marked with negative associations. Richard foregrounds his deformed figure in ways that advance his political power, appealing to bodily deformity and the impotence he claims it entails to obscure his shrewd political maneuvers. Understanding the powerful ends to which Richard uses his disability allows us to think about disabled identity in the Renaissance as a complex negotiation o...
Includes bibliographical references.Analysing the different ways in which the persistent trope of th...
In keeping with many disability theorists’ belief that disability is largely socially constructed, S...
"Crip Estrangement: Shakespeare, Disability, Metatheatre" explores moments in Shakespeare when a non...
The essay analyses Richard III through the perspective of disability studies, exploring questions c...
The purpose of this article is to offer an historical reading of the character Richard/Gloucester in...
By attempting to discuss Richard’s psychology and resulting physical response of his deformity, this...
This essay investigates William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar as a disability narrative...
Traditional portrayals of William Shakespeare’s Richard III (1592) in film interpret Richard’s physi...
“Irregular” bodies—described as deformed, foul, ugly, maimed, crooked, limping, sick, and infected—a...
The body of a mediaeval monarch was always under scrutiny, and Richard III's was no exception. In de...
This essay is about how disability rhetoric functions in early modern plays beyond the visible diffe...
This article examines various retellings of a single story to explore how conceptions of disability ...
This essay argues that King Lear presents a version of disability determined not by bodily auth...
Despite numerous studies of the origins and meanings of Katherine’s shrewishness in Shakespeare’s Th...
This article reviews some instances of disability in Shakespeare's works and some instances of Disab...
Includes bibliographical references.Analysing the different ways in which the persistent trope of th...
In keeping with many disability theorists’ belief that disability is largely socially constructed, S...
"Crip Estrangement: Shakespeare, Disability, Metatheatre" explores moments in Shakespeare when a non...
The essay analyses Richard III through the perspective of disability studies, exploring questions c...
The purpose of this article is to offer an historical reading of the character Richard/Gloucester in...
By attempting to discuss Richard’s psychology and resulting physical response of his deformity, this...
This essay investigates William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar as a disability narrative...
Traditional portrayals of William Shakespeare’s Richard III (1592) in film interpret Richard’s physi...
“Irregular” bodies—described as deformed, foul, ugly, maimed, crooked, limping, sick, and infected—a...
The body of a mediaeval monarch was always under scrutiny, and Richard III's was no exception. In de...
This essay is about how disability rhetoric functions in early modern plays beyond the visible diffe...
This article examines various retellings of a single story to explore how conceptions of disability ...
This essay argues that King Lear presents a version of disability determined not by bodily auth...
Despite numerous studies of the origins and meanings of Katherine’s shrewishness in Shakespeare’s Th...
This article reviews some instances of disability in Shakespeare's works and some instances of Disab...
Includes bibliographical references.Analysing the different ways in which the persistent trope of th...
In keeping with many disability theorists’ belief that disability is largely socially constructed, S...
"Crip Estrangement: Shakespeare, Disability, Metatheatre" explores moments in Shakespeare when a non...