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

Shakespeare Broadcasts and the Question of Value

View through CrossRef
This Element investigates the framing 'texts' of Shakespeare's works in live theatre broadcasts produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company. Despite growing engagement from scholars of digital Shakespeares with the phenomenon of broadcast theatre and the aesthetics of filmed productions, the paratexts which accompany the live-streams − live or pre-recorded features, including interviews and short films − have largely been ignored. The Element considers how RSC live broadcasts of rarely performed, often critically maligned works are mediated for contemporary audiences, focusing on The Two Gentlemen of Verona (2014), Titus Andronicus (2017), and The Merry Wives of Windsor (2018). It questions the role of the theatre institution as a powerful broker in the (re)negotiation of hierarchies of value within Shakespeare's canon. Individual sections also trace the longer genealogies of paratextual value-narratives in print, proposing that broadcast paratexts be understood as participating in a broader history of Shakespearean paratexts in print and performance.
Cambridge University Press
Title: Shakespeare Broadcasts and the Question of Value
Description:
This Element investigates the framing 'texts' of Shakespeare's works in live theatre broadcasts produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company.
Despite growing engagement from scholars of digital Shakespeares with the phenomenon of broadcast theatre and the aesthetics of filmed productions, the paratexts which accompany the live-streams − live or pre-recorded features, including interviews and short films − have largely been ignored.
The Element considers how RSC live broadcasts of rarely performed, often critically maligned works are mediated for contemporary audiences, focusing on The Two Gentlemen of Verona (2014), Titus Andronicus (2017), and The Merry Wives of Windsor (2018).
It questions the role of the theatre institution as a powerful broker in the (re)negotiation of hierarchies of value within Shakespeare's canon.
Individual sections also trace the longer genealogies of paratextual value-narratives in print, proposing that broadcast paratexts be understood as participating in a broader history of Shakespearean paratexts in print and performance.

Related Results

Shakespeare in a Blender
Shakespeare in a Blender
As a collective with four to six members at any one time, A Company of Fools’ mandate is to create innovative and accessible pieces based on the works of William Shakespeare. The c...
Shakespeare and Text
Shakespeare and Text
Abstract OXFORD SHAKESPEARE TOPICS General Editors: Peter Holland and Stanley Wells Oxford Shakespeare Topics provide students and teachers with short books on impor...
Linguistic Landscape in Tanjungbalai
Linguistic Landscape in Tanjungbalai
This study investigated the texts used in public spaces in Tanjungbalai, North Sumatera, Indonesia. From 182 signboards analyzed, it was found that the items in the bottom-up categ...
Shakespeare and the Body Politic
Shakespeare and the Body Politic
mate Shakespeare’s corpus, and one of the most prominent is the image of the body. Sketched out in the eternal lines of his plays and poetry, and often drawn in exquisite detail, v...
La Voz de Shakespeare: Empowering Latinx Communities to Speak, Own and Embody the Text
La Voz de Shakespeare: Empowering Latinx Communities to Speak, Own and Embody the Text
The chapter addresses the misconception that Shakespeare’s words are reserved for elite (re: white) actors, a fact that has led to some Latinx actors being hesitant to perform Shak...
Political Shakespeare: A Reflection Of Politics In Shakespeare’s Works
Political Shakespeare: A Reflection Of Politics In Shakespeare’s Works
Shakespeare's plays have been historically intertwined with politics, reflecting the social and political realities of Elizabethan England. This research examines the political dim...

Back to Top