"'Am not I your Rosalind?': Negotiating Ovidian Identity and Transformation in Shakespeare's As You Like It" argues that the theatrical self-masquerade, that rare and uniquely Shakespearean moment in which a character explicitly plays a version of him or herself onstage, is an ideal site to explore the intersection of language, identity, and transformation. The self-masquerade foregrounds the intimate relationship between language and subjectivity, by enabling characters to fruitfully exploit language in order to imagine, stage, and enact their own identity constitution and transformation. Although many Shakespearean characters participate in disguise-making, only Rosalind (As You Like It) and Prince Hal (1 Henry IV) have the linguistic and...
Rosalind, the heroine of Shakespeare’s As You Like It, was historically played by a boy and engages ...
This project expands upon Rohy\u27s ideas of contingent sexualities to explore contingent gender ide...
As a keen observer of and commentator upon psychology and human behavior, Shakespeare, naturally, al...
William Shakespeare in As You Like It highlights the gender roles in the society. Gender is develope...
An extremely fascinating idea, which is boldly exposed in one of the brilliant Shakespeare's comedie...
With a witty cross-dressed inamorata at its center, As You Like It shows the imprint of the ground-b...
Abstract This research paper has been conducted to examine Shakespeare’s comedy As You Like It from...
This study is an attempt to explore the subject of female transvestism in Shakespeare's comedies und...
In As You Lile It the dramatic situation is already clear at the beginning of the second act. The tw...
This paper surveys the problems of identity in a number of Shakespeare’s plays, such as The Taming o...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.These chapters ...
Although most critics affirm the importance of interior direction and role-playing in many of Shakes...
In this article, I explore the disguised body in two of Shakespeare’s comedies As You Like It and Tw...
When a person dresses up as something other than himself, then he creates a different person. Actors...
As You Like It is a typical Shakespearean romantic comedy. The structure deals with a love story whi...
Rosalind, the heroine of Shakespeare’s As You Like It, was historically played by a boy and engages ...
This project expands upon Rohy\u27s ideas of contingent sexualities to explore contingent gender ide...
As a keen observer of and commentator upon psychology and human behavior, Shakespeare, naturally, al...
William Shakespeare in As You Like It highlights the gender roles in the society. Gender is develope...
An extremely fascinating idea, which is boldly exposed in one of the brilliant Shakespeare's comedie...
With a witty cross-dressed inamorata at its center, As You Like It shows the imprint of the ground-b...
Abstract This research paper has been conducted to examine Shakespeare’s comedy As You Like It from...
This study is an attempt to explore the subject of female transvestism in Shakespeare's comedies und...
In As You Lile It the dramatic situation is already clear at the beginning of the second act. The tw...
This paper surveys the problems of identity in a number of Shakespeare’s plays, such as The Taming o...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.These chapters ...
Although most critics affirm the importance of interior direction and role-playing in many of Shakes...
In this article, I explore the disguised body in two of Shakespeare’s comedies As You Like It and Tw...
When a person dresses up as something other than himself, then he creates a different person. Actors...
As You Like It is a typical Shakespearean romantic comedy. The structure deals with a love story whi...
Rosalind, the heroine of Shakespeare’s As You Like It, was historically played by a boy and engages ...
This project expands upon Rohy\u27s ideas of contingent sexualities to explore contingent gender ide...
As a keen observer of and commentator upon psychology and human behavior, Shakespeare, naturally, al...