New Shakespeare biographies are published every year, though very little new documentary evidence has come to light. Inevitably speculative, these biographies straddle the line between fact and fiction. Shakespeare and His Biographical Afterlives explores the relationship between fiction and non-fiction within Shakespeare’s biography, across a range of subjects including feminism, class politics, wartime propaganda, children’s fiction, and religion, expanding beyond the Anglophone world to include countries such as Germany and Spain, from the seventeenth century to present day.
Зміст
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Paul Franssen and Paul Edmondson
Chapter 1. Shakespeare’s Afterlives: Raising and Laying the Ghost of Authority
Paul Franssen
Biography
Chapter 2. The Debate about Shakespeare’s Character, Morals, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century Germany
Wolfgang Weiss
Chapter 3. ‘Talk to Him’: Wilde, His Friends, and Shakespeare’s Sonnets
Reiko Oya
Chapter 4. Fighting over Shakespeare: Commemorating the 1916 Tercentenary in Wartime
Clara Calvo
Chapter 5. The Shakespeare Courtship in the Millennium
Katherine Scheil
Chapter 6. Biographical Aftershocks: Shakespeare and Marlowe in the Wake of 9/11
Robert Sawyer
Fiction
Chapter 7. Performance and Life Analogies in Shakespeare Novels for Young Readers
Marga Munkelt
Chapter 8. Shakespeare as Character in Two Works by José Carlos Somoza
Ángel-Luis Pujante and Noemí Vera
Chapter 9. The Bard-Baiting Model in Upstart Crow and Something Rotten
Richard O’Brien
Select Bibliography
Index
Про автора
Paul Edmondson is Head of Research and Knowledge and Director of the Stratford-upon-Avon Poetry Festival for The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. He is co-series editor for Palgrave Macmillan’s Shakespeare Handbooks, and co-supervisory editor of the Penguin Shakespeare. His publications include: Twelfth Night: A Guide to the Text and Its Theatrical Life (Palgrave, 2005), with Stanley Wells, Shakespeare’s Sonnets (Oxford, 2004) and Shakespeare Beyond Doubt: Evidence, Argument, Controversy (Cambridge, 2013), and, with Paul Prescott and Erin Sullivan, A Year of Shakespeare: Re-living the World Shakespeare Festival (Bloomsbury, 2013).