Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Book review: Smith, E. (2020) This Is Shakespeare. The most erotic comedy, the most dramatic tragedy, men burned by shame, cardboard villains, feminists, show business stars and more (Translated from English by M.G. Sukhotina. Moscow: Mann, Ivanov and Fer

View through CrossRef
Modern literary criticism offers the reader a whole sphere of Shakespearean studies based on the ideas of historical poetics. In accordance with the latter, we understand the images and problems of dramas, comedies and tragedies of the great English playwright in the key of romantic, symbolist, psychoanalytic, and other interpretations. Emma Smith offers a relevant reading of Shakespeare’s texts, based on theatrical productions and film adaptations of his works in the 20th and 21st centuries. The actualization of the Shakespearean heritage is being implemented in modern theater and cinema as an attempt to bring the complex and diverse content of the writer’s tragedies and comedies closer to mass culture. As a result, there appears the effect of inversion, of a break-off with the deep philosophical problems of the Shakespeare theater. The chapters of the book somehow address the problem of interpretation -contemporary with Shakespeare and with our time. The author’s arsenal includes psychology and psychoanalysis, cultural and sociological approaches, which are combined with the actual philological analysis of plays. However, the book discusses the evolution of themes and genres the least. The works chosen for the analysis are well known to readers and experts. The book includes 20 chapters, each dedicated to one play. We stress that, in the educational process, this structure is very convenient because it draws one’s attention to the work as much as possible and allows determining one’s own perception, consent or disagreement with the author of the book. This feature has been tested in practical work with students in classes on Shakespeare’s works. We analyze all the interpretations of Shakespeare’s tragedies and comedies, both modern and historical, given in Smith’s book. The author of the book is interested, first of all, in topical approaches to understanding the plays of the English playwright, this is dictated by the very aim of the study - to interest the reader and show Shakespeare as our contemporary. The author of the book speaks a modern language with her reader, relying on the experience of attracting both wide readers and experts to reading Shakespeare’s works. Contribution of the authors: the authors contributed equally to this article. The authors declare no conflicts of interests.
Title: Book review: Smith, E. (2020) This Is Shakespeare. The most erotic comedy, the most dramatic tragedy, men burned by shame, cardboard villains, feminists, show business stars and more (Translated from English by M.G. Sukhotina. Moscow: Mann, Ivanov and Fer
Description:
Modern literary criticism offers the reader a whole sphere of Shakespearean studies based on the ideas of historical poetics.
In accordance with the latter, we understand the images and problems of dramas, comedies and tragedies of the great English playwright in the key of romantic, symbolist, psychoanalytic, and other interpretations.
Emma Smith offers a relevant reading of Shakespeare’s texts, based on theatrical productions and film adaptations of his works in the 20th and 21st centuries.
The actualization of the Shakespearean heritage is being implemented in modern theater and cinema as an attempt to bring the complex and diverse content of the writer’s tragedies and comedies closer to mass culture.
As a result, there appears the effect of inversion, of a break-off with the deep philosophical problems of the Shakespeare theater.
The chapters of the book somehow address the problem of interpretation -contemporary with Shakespeare and with our time.
The author’s arsenal includes psychology and psychoanalysis, cultural and sociological approaches, which are combined with the actual philological analysis of plays.
However, the book discusses the evolution of themes and genres the least.
The works chosen for the analysis are well known to readers and experts.
The book includes 20 chapters, each dedicated to one play.
We stress that, in the educational process, this structure is very convenient because it draws one’s attention to the work as much as possible and allows determining one’s own perception, consent or disagreement with the author of the book.
This feature has been tested in practical work with students in classes on Shakespeare’s works.
We analyze all the interpretations of Shakespeare’s tragedies and comedies, both modern and historical, given in Smith’s book.
The author of the book is interested, first of all, in topical approaches to understanding the plays of the English playwright, this is dictated by the very aim of the study - to interest the reader and show Shakespeare as our contemporary.
The author of the book speaks a modern language with her reader, relying on the experience of attracting both wide readers and experts to reading Shakespeare’s works.
Contribution of the authors: the authors contributed equally to this article.
The authors declare no conflicts of interests.

Related Results

Shame and HIV: Strategies for addressing the negative impact shame has on public health and diagnosis and treatment of HIV
Shame and HIV: Strategies for addressing the negative impact shame has on public health and diagnosis and treatment of HIV
AbstractThere are five ways in which shame might negatively impact upon our attempts to combat and treat HIV. Shame can prevent an individual from disclosing all the relevant fact...
Battle of the sketches: Short form and feminism in the comedy mode
Battle of the sketches: Short form and feminism in the comedy mode
The screenwriting of sketch comedy and, in particular, how female writers of sketch comedy engage with this form to illuminate female experience, are topics not yet widely theorize...
Andries Bongcn (ca. 1732-1792) en de Franse invloed op de Amsterdamse kastenmakerij in de tweede helft van de achttiende eeuw
Andries Bongcn (ca. 1732-1792) en de Franse invloed op de Amsterdamse kastenmakerij in de tweede helft van de achttiende eeuw
AbstractAs was the case with silversmiths (Note 3), many more cabinet-makers were wcrking in Amsterdam during the second half of the 18th century than in any other city in the Dutc...
Settler Shame: A Critique of the Role of Shame in Settler–Indigenous Relationships in Canada
Settler Shame: A Critique of the Role of Shame in Settler–Indigenous Relationships in Canada
This article both defines and shows the limits of settler shame for achieving decolonialized justice. It discusses the work settler shame does in “healing” the nation and deliverin...
In Defense of Shame: Shame in the Context of Guilt and Embarrassment
In Defense of Shame: Shame in the Context of Guilt and Embarrassment
We are interested in the relations among shame, guilt, and embarrassment and especially in how each relates to judgments of character. We start by analyzing the distinction between...
Productive faces of shame: An interview with Elspeth Probyn
Productive faces of shame: An interview with Elspeth Probyn
Shame has typically been understood as a negative emotion, a view which is prevalent in individualist, psychologising discourses about human experience. Elspeth Probyn's approach t...
Jekyll and Hyde: Men's Constructions of Feminism and Feminists
Jekyll and Hyde: Men's Constructions of Feminism and Feminists
Research and commentary on men's responses to feminism have demonstrated the range of ways in which men have mobilized both for and against feminist principles. This article argues...
Our Inner Custodian
Our Inner Custodian
Current approaches to understanding shame are rooted in controversial and even radically contrasting assumptions about shame and its relevance for social interaction and individual...

Recent Results

Goya
Goya
Javier Costa Clavell, 1973, Mundilibro...
Art, Technology, Consciousness
Art, Technology, Consciousness
Roy Ascott, Art and science, February 2002, Intellect (UK)...
101 Celtic Spirals (101 Celtic)
101 Celtic Spirals (101 Celtic)
Courtney Davis, Spirals in art, March 15, 2005, F&W Publishers...

Back to Top