Habermas’ sense of a “cultural Public Sphere” is a notoriously complex term and, when applied to Early Modern cultures, needs careful definition. This essay both introduces the variety of methods by which we might approach playtexts with a view to their public – auditory – impact and contributes to a debate about an audience's understanding of Shakespeare's plays. By selecting two words and their spread of use in one play, Twelfth Night, we might appreciate the potential for meaningful ambiguity latent in how we hear the language of live performance. If we search for how certain terms (in this case, the cluster of semes derived from repetitions of “fancy” and “play”), we might find at times incompatible senses, yet we get near to appreciati...
One of the most striking features of performances at the reconstructed Shakespeare’s Globe has been ...
There are hundreds of How-to-Teach-Shakespeare books flooding the market, and more tomes pile up ann...
Although scholarly interest in available “alternatives” to early modern London theater has recently ...
Habermas’ sense of a “cultural Public Sphere” is a notoriously complex term and, when applied to Ear...
‘No country for old men’? Shakespeare, the public sphere, and the gerontological turn in theatr
Written by a team of leading international scholars, this Companion is designed to illuminate Shakes...
What happens when scholarship on the early modern stage is presented on a recreation of an early mod...
Regardless of genre, Shakespeare’s plays open in many different ways on the stage. Some openings com...
This essay probes the established history of how Shakespeare developed a worldwide audience by placi...
Since the National Theatre (NT) broadcast All’s Well that Ends Well (2009) live from the Olivier sta...
For the twenty-first-century reader of William Shakespeare’s plays, meaning construction is an activ...
The question of audience (dis)unity has been a central, if not always explicit, element of the theo...
Shakespeare Offstage: Drama and Cultural Currency, 1603-1660 argues that the Shakespearean theater p...
This paper aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge, and its connection...
This dissertation argues that early modern playwrights used metadrama to construct the experience an...
One of the most striking features of performances at the reconstructed Shakespeare’s Globe has been ...
There are hundreds of How-to-Teach-Shakespeare books flooding the market, and more tomes pile up ann...
Although scholarly interest in available “alternatives” to early modern London theater has recently ...
Habermas’ sense of a “cultural Public Sphere” is a notoriously complex term and, when applied to Ear...
‘No country for old men’? Shakespeare, the public sphere, and the gerontological turn in theatr
Written by a team of leading international scholars, this Companion is designed to illuminate Shakes...
What happens when scholarship on the early modern stage is presented on a recreation of an early mod...
Regardless of genre, Shakespeare’s plays open in many different ways on the stage. Some openings com...
This essay probes the established history of how Shakespeare developed a worldwide audience by placi...
Since the National Theatre (NT) broadcast All’s Well that Ends Well (2009) live from the Olivier sta...
For the twenty-first-century reader of William Shakespeare’s plays, meaning construction is an activ...
The question of audience (dis)unity has been a central, if not always explicit, element of the theo...
Shakespeare Offstage: Drama and Cultural Currency, 1603-1660 argues that the Shakespearean theater p...
This paper aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge, and its connection...
This dissertation argues that early modern playwrights used metadrama to construct the experience an...
One of the most striking features of performances at the reconstructed Shakespeare’s Globe has been ...
There are hundreds of How-to-Teach-Shakespeare books flooding the market, and more tomes pile up ann...
Although scholarly interest in available “alternatives” to early modern London theater has recently ...