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2. - Performance

from The Year’s Contribution to Shakespeare Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 August 2023

Emma Smith
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

The COVID-19 pandemic represents innumerable, incalculable loss. Surviving it is a privilege, but we are far from finished processing the experiences of the past three years, particularly as the virus continues to mutate and shape our lives. The idea of re-visiting the earliest lockdowns – those freeze-frames of isolation and uncertainty – may not be a pleasant thought. But Lockdown Shakespeare: New Evolutions in Performance and Adaptation, is a remarkably cathartic read. Editors Gemma Kate Allred, Benjamin Broadribb and Erin Sullivan have curated a collection of essays, reflections and testimonies to record how Shakespearians spent the first fourteen months of the pandemic imagining, creating and reaching out to each other on a global scale. While acknowledging the toll that COVID-19 took on the world, the book refutes the Royal Shakespeare Company’s assertion that the pandemic shut down all forms of theatre.

Type
Chapter
Information
Shakespeare Survey 76
Digital and Virtual Shakespeare
, pp. 239 - 250
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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References

Works Reviewed

Allred, Gemma Kate, Broadribb, Benjamin and Sullivan, Erin, eds., Lockdown Shakespeare: New Evolutions in Performance and Adaptation (London, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carroll, William C., Adapting Macbeth: A Cultural History (London, 2022)Google Scholar
Hawkins, Ella, Shakespeare in Elizabethan Costume: ‘Period Dress’ in Twenty-First-Century Performance (London, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, Diana E., and O’Neill, Stephen, eds., The Arden Research Handbook of Shakespeare and Adaptation (London, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Issa, Islam, Shakespeare and Terrorism (London and New York, 2021)Google Scholar
Joubin, Alexa Alice, Shakespeare and East Asia (Oxford, 2021)Google Scholar
Kirwan, Peter, and Prince, Kathryn, eds., The Arden Research Handbook of Shakespeare and Contemporary Performance (London, 2021)Google Scholar
Loftis, Sonya Freeman, Shakespeare and Disability Studies (Oxford, 2021)Google Scholar
MacConochie, Alex, Staging Touch in Shakespeare’s England (Oxford, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Motoyama, Tetsuhito, Fielding, Rosalind and Konno, Fumiaki, eds., Re-Imagining Shakespeare in Contemporary Japan: A Selection of Japanese Theatrical Adaptations of Shakespeare (London, 2021)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, Jami, British Black and Asian Shakespeareans: Integrating Shakespeare, 1966–2018 (London, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schoch, Richard, A Short History of Shakespeare in Performance: From the Restoration to the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge, 2021)Google Scholar
Smith, Simon, and Whipday, Emma, eds., Playing and Playgoing in Early Modern England: Actor, Audience, and Performance (Cambridge, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sullivan, Jr, Garrett, A., Shakespeare and British World War Two Film (Cambridge, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodford-Gormley, Donna, Shakespeare in Cuba: Caliban’s Books (New York, 2021)CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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