Description |
ix, 253 pages ; 23 cm |
Contents |
Talking Shakespeare / Michael Scott -- How does Hamlet end? / Nigel Wood -- Shakespeare and the Elizabethan stage : touring practice in Shakespeare's day / Peter Davison -- Studying Shakespeare and his contemporaries / Emma Smith -- Shakespeare and history / Dermot Cavanagh -- 'Home, sweet home' : Stratford-upon-Avon and the making of the Royal Shakespeare Company as a national institution / Colin Chambers -- Twelfth night : 'one face, one voice, one habit, and two persons!' / Janice Wardle -- Shakespeare and the homoerotic / Miles Thompson and Imelda Whelehan --Shakespeare and race : Othello I.iii / Deborah Cartmell -- The unkindest cuts : flashcut excess in Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet / Bernice W. Kliman -- Showing versus telling : Shakespeare's Ekphraseis, visual absences, and the cinema / Gabriel Egan -- Shakespeare and the future / Kiernan Ryan -- Why we talk Shakespeare / Michael J. Collins -- Appendix : Bibliography of Shakespeare and electronic sources / Josephine Webb |
Summary |
This text focuses on the reciprocal relationship between past and present, the way Shakespeare talks to us, the ways in which we talk about Shakespeare, and the way in which Shakespeare, ultimately, is 'all talk' |
Notes |
"November 2001" |
Bibliography |
"Bibliography of Shakespeare and Electronic Sources": pages 213-220 |
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 221-245) and index |
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Includes bibliographical references and index |
Subject |
Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 -- Criticism and interpretation.
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Minorities -- Mental health services -- Australia -- South Australia.
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Health education -- Australia -- South Australia -- Evaluation.
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Immigrants -- Mental health services -- Australia -- South Australia.
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Genre/Form |
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
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Author |
Scott, Michael, 1949-
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Cartmell, Deborah.
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South Australian Community Health Research Unit.
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LC no. |
00053053 |
ISBN |
0333777913 hardcover |
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0333777735 paperback |
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