This article explores the role of new writing within two contemporary Shakespearean institutions, the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) and Shakespeare’s Globe. Focusing on the 2010 premieres and subsequent touring productions of David Greig’s Dunsinane for the RSC and Howard Brenton’s Anne Boleyn at the Globe, this article reflects on how these plays derive distinctive meanings from their repertory connection to Shakespeare. At the same time, I argue that by reconceiving accepted historical narratives and figures, these plays also challenge causal links between past and present, including the supposed lineage between Shakespeare and contemporary writers that both institutions espouse
In this article Tom Cornford examines the policy of extending and adapting the permanent stage of Sh...
Sarah Bradshaw’s thesis argues that Shakespeare\u27s legacy is a fundamentally collaborative product...
The Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) has been at the forefront of the production of plays by Shakespe...
This article explores the role of new writing within two contemporary Shakespearean institutions, th...
Greg Doran, Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, inaugurated his Shakespeare Nation p...
The reconstruction of the Globe Theatre on London’s Bankside had historical accuracy as one of its a...
In this article Tom Cornford examines the policy of extending and adapting the permanent stage of Sh...
This article addresses recent developments in literary-critical studies of Shakespeare\u27s status w...
This article engages with one of the current critical and bibliographical concerns of Shakespeare st...
The following article is an attempt at looking at the modern appropriations of Shakespeare’s King Le...
The Everybody’s Shakespeare festival (1994), the Complete Works Festival (2006-2007) and the ...
This article examines the Royal Shakespeare Company’s (RSC) recent focus on digital ‘inn...
Shakespeare thrives not only in the theatre, but also through what Bolter and Grusin call remediatio...
This article engages with one of the current critical and bibliographical concerns of Shakespeare st...
This article examines what the emerging field of rehearsal studies can offer scholars of Shakespeare...
In this article Tom Cornford examines the policy of extending and adapting the permanent stage of Sh...
Sarah Bradshaw’s thesis argues that Shakespeare\u27s legacy is a fundamentally collaborative product...
The Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) has been at the forefront of the production of plays by Shakespe...
This article explores the role of new writing within two contemporary Shakespearean institutions, th...
Greg Doran, Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, inaugurated his Shakespeare Nation p...
The reconstruction of the Globe Theatre on London’s Bankside had historical accuracy as one of its a...
In this article Tom Cornford examines the policy of extending and adapting the permanent stage of Sh...
This article addresses recent developments in literary-critical studies of Shakespeare\u27s status w...
This article engages with one of the current critical and bibliographical concerns of Shakespeare st...
The following article is an attempt at looking at the modern appropriations of Shakespeare’s King Le...
The Everybody’s Shakespeare festival (1994), the Complete Works Festival (2006-2007) and the ...
This article examines the Royal Shakespeare Company’s (RSC) recent focus on digital ‘inn...
Shakespeare thrives not only in the theatre, but also through what Bolter and Grusin call remediatio...
This article engages with one of the current critical and bibliographical concerns of Shakespeare st...
This article examines what the emerging field of rehearsal studies can offer scholars of Shakespeare...
In this article Tom Cornford examines the policy of extending and adapting the permanent stage of Sh...
Sarah Bradshaw’s thesis argues that Shakespeare\u27s legacy is a fundamentally collaborative product...
The Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) has been at the forefront of the production of plays by Shakespe...