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SHAKSPER 2000: On Page and Stage: Shakespeare in Polish and World
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@ws.bowiestate.edu) Date: 12/29/00
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 11.2378 Friday, 29 December 2000 From: K. Kujawinska Courtney <miranda@krysia.uni.lodz.pl> Date: Wednesday, 27 Dec 2000 07:30:52 -0600 Subject: On Page and Stage: Shakespeare in Polish and World Culture On Page and Stage: Shakespeare in Polish and World Culture, ed. K. Kujawinska Courtney (Krakow: UNIVERSITAS, 2000). Table of Contents: Foreword PART 1: RENAISANCE LITERARY AND CULTURAL HERITAGE; 1. Frances Barasch: Theatrical Prints: Zany, Pantalone, and the Elizabethans. 2. Anna Wilson: OTHELLO and Melancholy of Jealousy, 3. Dolora Chapelle Wojciehowski The Ghost and the Machine: Syphilis and the Virtual Bodies of HAMLET. 4. Monica Matei Chesnoiu "Our Bohemia and Your Sicilia": Chorographies of European Landscapes in the WINTER'S TALE. PART 2: FROM THE TEXTUAL AND GENRE PERSPECTIVE: 1. Lyudmila Tataru: Text Perspective in Shakespeare's Sonnets. 2. Vladimir Vakrushev Numerical Patterns in ROMEO AND JULIET by William Shakespeare 3. Igor Shaitanov: The Prologue to Genre: Richard Gloucester's Introductory Soliloquy. 4. Peter Cummings: "This Double Voice;" "Still-Gazing Eyes": Textuality and the Reader in Shakespeare's Non-dramatic Poems. 5. Peter Barlow: Wielki Poeta--Wielkie Trudnosci: Barriers to the Bard? Problems Facing Polish University Students in the Study of Shakespeare. PART 3: PERFORMANCE AND THEATRE CRITICISM: 1. Marta Gibinska: More than Jan Kott's Shakespeare--Shakespeare in Polish Theatre After 1956. 2. Odette Blumenfeld: HAMLET at the Craiova National Theatre 3. Ros King: Cultural Exchange and THE MERCHANT OF VENICE 4. Yoshiko Kawachi: ROMEO AND JULIET in Japan. PART 4: CRITICISM IN THEORETICAL AND CULTURAL CONTEXTS: 1. Xenia Georgopoulou: "World's Exile": Play-Death and Rebirth in ROMEO AND JULIET and THE WINTER's TALE. 2. Matthew A. Fike; Gertrude's Mermaid Allusion 3. Krystyna Kujawinska Courtney ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA; The Agon of Mimesis and Diegesis 4. Ted Motohashi: "Remember Saint Crispin": HENRY V and the Politics of Memory 5. Michael Managan: Shakespeare's First Action Heroes: Critical Masculinities in Culture Both Popular and Unpopular. PART 5: CREATIVE WRITING RESPONSE TO SHAKESPEARE; 1. Geoffrey Haresnape: The Ram and the Ewe. The volume is distributed by its publisher: TAIWPN UNIVERSITAS ul. Zmudzka 6A 31-426 KRAKOW POLSKA/POLAND e-mail: box@universitas.com.pl http://www.universitas.com.pl
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