This essay uses Object-Oriented Ontology, a posthumanist theoretical model, to explore how King Lear’s use of and relation to objects can provide insight into his characterization. This essay provides a model for scrutinizing the role of objects—whether animate or inanimate—in performances of early modern drama; furthermore, it argues that King Lear’s use of objects reveals a consistent refusal to understand others, which upsets a redemptive arc in the play. To that end, the article proposes an ethical model—demonstrated by Kent—that responds to the play’s otherwise desolate worldview
Hence it may be not be relevant to associate Shakespeare with postmodernism where his religious and ...
Drawing on the discourses of medieval monasticism, Reformation theology, and modern psychiatry, this...
This brief paper has basically two aims. First, it intends to introduce object-oriented ontology (OO...
“‘Take (Meta) Physic, Pomp’: King Lear and (Dis)oriented Ontology” negotiates the intersection betwe...
When Lear asks the blinded Gloucester if he can “see how this world goes,” there is a peculiar and h...
When Ben Jonson summons Shakespeare in his famous poem, “To The Memory of My Beloved the Author, Mr....
This dissertation challenges the dominant new historicist reading of Shakespeare's plays, characteri...
Acknowledging the limits of theatre activism in the face of escalating displays of power and social ...
Recent years have seen posthumanism used as a critical term in literary studies, enabling scholars t...
This essay engages with King Lear to perform an ethical meditation. The essay finds within the play ...
Hamlet's tragedy is constructed as a perspective of matter that is destined for decay, and this "obj...
King Lear has been extensively used by Shakespearean critics in South Africa for the discussion of l...
This article examines the ontological relationship between audience and play in early English drama,...
New dramaturgy expands beyond the theatre and stage, working on the ways in which things in each tim...
This essay traces the ways in which Edward Lear’s limericks and other related nonsense texts proceed...
Hence it may be not be relevant to associate Shakespeare with postmodernism where his religious and ...
Drawing on the discourses of medieval monasticism, Reformation theology, and modern psychiatry, this...
This brief paper has basically two aims. First, it intends to introduce object-oriented ontology (OO...
“‘Take (Meta) Physic, Pomp’: King Lear and (Dis)oriented Ontology” negotiates the intersection betwe...
When Lear asks the blinded Gloucester if he can “see how this world goes,” there is a peculiar and h...
When Ben Jonson summons Shakespeare in his famous poem, “To The Memory of My Beloved the Author, Mr....
This dissertation challenges the dominant new historicist reading of Shakespeare's plays, characteri...
Acknowledging the limits of theatre activism in the face of escalating displays of power and social ...
Recent years have seen posthumanism used as a critical term in literary studies, enabling scholars t...
This essay engages with King Lear to perform an ethical meditation. The essay finds within the play ...
Hamlet's tragedy is constructed as a perspective of matter that is destined for decay, and this "obj...
King Lear has been extensively used by Shakespearean critics in South Africa for the discussion of l...
This article examines the ontological relationship between audience and play in early English drama,...
New dramaturgy expands beyond the theatre and stage, working on the ways in which things in each tim...
This essay traces the ways in which Edward Lear’s limericks and other related nonsense texts proceed...
Hence it may be not be relevant to associate Shakespeare with postmodernism where his religious and ...
Drawing on the discourses of medieval monasticism, Reformation theology, and modern psychiatry, this...
This brief paper has basically two aims. First, it intends to introduce object-oriented ontology (OO...