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Shakespeare, Time and the Victorians

Shakespeare, Time and the Victorians

Shakespeare, Time and the Victorians

A Pictorial Exploration
Stuart Sillars, Universitetet i Bergen, Norway
December 2011
Available
Hardback
9780521509695
£110.00
GBP
Hardback

    Time and the visual sense were two essential preoccupations of the Victorians, and both were central to their presentations of Shakespeare's plays. In this extensive new study, Stuart Sillars examines multiple facets of this complex relationship. The desire for authenticity in production, in the work of Charles Kean and his followers, leads to elaborate sets that define and direct the performances' movement through time. Visual artists of all kinds fracture and extend the plays' movements, the Pre-Raphaelites through new techniques and approaches, illustrators through new forms of engraving and printing, and photographers through the emerging forms of the medium. The book also considers the multiple forms in which performances were recorded and re-created visually, and absorbed into the memories of their viewers. With many previously unpublished images, it draws together multiple fields to offer a new perspective on one of the most productive and various periods of Shakespeare activity.

    • Explores the configuration of time in Shakespeare's plays through paintings, illustrations and staging in the Victorian period, increasing awareness of these forms and enhancing their critical and interpretive potential
    • Investigates the work of Charles Kean through ideas of history and Shakespearean production, presenting a fresh perspective
    • Complements and extends Stuart Sillars' previous works - Painting Shakespeare: The Artist as Critic, 1720–1820 and The Illustrated Shakespeare, 1709–1875

    Reviews & endorsements

    '… an exhilarating gallery of Shakespearean images as these featured on the nineteenth century stage, as well as on canvas and print. This richly illustrated book offers new insights into Victorian cultural history, as Shakespeare the chronicler of the past morphs into Shakespeare the timeless moralist … Specialists in art and theatre history will revel in the range and scholarship of this engaging analysis.' Catherine Belsey, Swansea University

    'Multidisciplinary in scope and imaginatively illustrated, Stuart Sillars's wonderfully well-informed study casts a bright light on Victorian philosophy and on the period's artistic and theatrical aesthetics.' Stanley Wells, The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

    'If you want to know anything about Shakespeare and the visual arts then Stuart Sillars is your man.' Around the Globe

    'The author provides a lavish selection of colour plates of Victorian Shakespeare pairings … Sillars' treatment of Victorian Shakespeare is visually compelling and intellectually rewarding.' Choice

    'Sillars' focus remains predominantly aesthetic, and he is unquestionably a master of the form … Few scholars can match Sillars for his close readings of how images disclose themselves to viewers … Every reader stands to profit from the author's exemplary understanding of how images work in themselves and how they work upon those who look at them.' Shakespeare Quarterly

    'It will remain an outstanding contribution to this field for many years to come … an outstanding book on one significant element within Victorian culture.' J. B. Bullen, Memori Di Shakespeare

    See more reviews

    Product details

    December 2011
    Hardback
    9780521509695
    384 pages
    254 × 200 × 30 mm
    1.3kg
    120 b/w illus. 70 colour illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. History, theatre and Shakespeare
    • 2. Dress, attribute and image
    • 3. Pre-Raphaelite Meridian
    • 4. Charles Kean, staging and time
    • 5. Memorialising performance
    • 6. Ars et Veritas: photography and the Victorian stage
    • 7. Fragmentation, excision and dispersal
    • 8. Painting beyond Pre-Raphaelitism
    • 9. Later stagings and the debate with painting
    • 10. Encounters and memories
    • Select bibliography.
      Author
    • Stuart Sillars , Universitetet i Bergen, Norway

      Stuart Sillars is Professor of English at the Universities of Bergen and Agder, Norway. He has written extensively on literature and the visual arts, and his most recent books are Painting Shakespeare: The Artist as Critic, 1720–1820 (2006) and The Illustrated Shakespeare, 1709–1875 (2008), both published by Cambridge University Press. Earlier books have explored visual and literary art in the two world wars, illustration and the Victorian novel and the special forms of irony involved in English writing of the early twentieth century.