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Reenacting Shakespeare in the Shakespeare aftermath: the intermedial turn and turn to embodiment

Part of the Reproducing Shakespeare series
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In the Shakespeare aftermath-where all things Shakespearean are available for reassembly and reenactment-experimental transactions with Shakespeare become consequential events in their own right, informed by technologies of performance and display that defy conventional staging and filmic practices. Reenactment signifies here both an undoing and a redoing, above all a doing differently of what otherwise continues to be enacted as the same. Rooted in the modernist avant-garde, this revisionary approach to models of the past is advanced by theater artists and filmmakers whose number includes Romeo Castellucci, Annie Dorsen, Peter Greenaway, Thomas Ostermeier, Ivo van Hove, and New York's Wooster Group, among others. Although the intermedial turn taken by such artists heralds a virtual future, this book demonstrates that embodiment-in more diverse forms than ever before-continues to exert expressive force in Shakespearean reproduction's turning world.

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£79.50
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
1137404825 / 9781137404824
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
822.33
11/03/2019
England
English
343 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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