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Shakespeare and British World War Two Film

Shakespeare and British World War Two Film

Shakespeare and British World War Two Film

Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr , Pennsylvania State University
February 2024
Available
Paperback
9781108829663

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    During World War Two, many British writers and thinkers turned to Shakespeare in order to articulate the values for which their nation was fighting. Yet the cinema presented moviegoers with a more multifaceted Shakespeare, one who signalled division as well as unity. Shakespeare and British World War Two Film models a synchronic approach to adaptation that, by situating the Shakespeare movie within histories of film and society, avoids the familiar impasse in which the playwright's works are the beginning, middle and end of critical study. Through close analysis of works by Laurence Olivier, Leslie Howard, Humphrey Jennings, and the partners Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, among others, this study demonstrates how Shakespeare served as a powerful imaginative resource for filmmakers seeking to think through some of the most pressing issues and problems that beset wartime British society.

    • Proposes a historicist approach for studying the adaptation and appropriation of Shakespeare, with implications for scholars of adaptation working well beyond the realm of Shakespeare studies
    • Synthesizes rich and informative historical information with close analysis of Shakespearean appropriation and adaptation during a period of continual historical and cultural fascination
    • Takes an interdisciplinary approach, engaging with adaptation theory, literary criticism, film history and social history, offering insight to scholars across multiple fields while remaining accessible to the general reader

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Garrett Sullivan's brilliant study of Shakespeare in British film during the Second World War defines a new and exhilarating approach to examining the wide range of ways in which a particular social and cultural history and geography of Shakespeare in films – from adaptations to citations to offshoots – can be investigated. This is superb and innovative scholarship that has sent me rushing back to films I knew well and rushing off to watch others I had never even heard of.' Peter Holland, University of Notre Dame

    'Illuminating the tensions between Shakespeare as a unifying force and as a register of social and cultural difference, Shakespeare and British World War Two Film is an interpretive tour de force. Attentive to industrial particularities, and sophisticatedly contextualized, this study combines the concept of the 'wartime Shakespeare topos' and the trope of the 'ideologeme' to understand Shakespeare's complex status in a series of film appropriations from the 1940s. In so doing, it tells a compelling story about the uses of cultural icons in conflict settings, and the extent to which Shakespeare functions as an emblem of national unity.' Mark Thornton Burnett, Queen's University Belfast

    'There is … much to enjoy here, not least the book's methodological contributions to the study of Shakespearean adaptation and appropriation.' Emma Smith, Times Literary Supplement

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 2022
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781108906319
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • 1. 'Hamlet's a loser, Leslie!': Pimpernel Smith, Hamlet and film propaganda
    • 2. 'What we all have in common': Fires Were Started, Macbeth and the people's war
    • 3. The Black-White Gentleman: The Man in Grey, Othello and the melodrama of Anglo-West Indian relations
    • 4. 'Bottom's not a gangster!': A Matter of Life and Death, A Midsummer Night's Dream and post-war Anglo-American relations.
      Contributors
    • Author
    • Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr , Pennsylvania State University

      Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr., Liberal Arts Professor of English, teaches at Pennsylvania State University. He is author of The Drama of Landscape: Land, Property and Social Relations on the Early Modern Stage (1998), Memory and Forgetting in English Renaissance Drama: Shakespeare, Marlowe, Webster (Cambridge University Press, 2005), and Sleep, Romance and Human Embodiment: Vitality from Spenser to Milton (Cambridge University Press, 2012).  With Mary Floyd-Wilson, he co-edited Environment and Embodiment in Early Modern England (2007) and The Geographies of Embodiment in Early Modern England (2020). He co-edits, with Julie Sanders, the book series Early Modern Literary Geographies. He is a past trustee of the Shakespeare Association of America.