Results 11 to 20 of about 189,027 (259)
Shakespeare across the Taiwan Strait: A Developmental Perspective
Shakespeare studies in Mainland China and Taiwan evolved from the same origin during the two centuries after Shakespeare being introduced into China in the early nineteenth century.
Yu Sun, Longhai Zhang
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This collectively authored position paper discusses “hybrid” Shakespeares in Central and Eastern Europe, focusing on productions that offer formal experimentation and transnational perspectives.
Anna Cetera-Włodarczyk +4 more
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High Levels of Well-Being and Being Infected With the COVID-19 Virus Predicted Post-Traumatic Growth in Healthcare Workers. [PDF]
ABSTRACT Introduction Healthcare workers (HCWs) are continuously exposed to stress and potentially traumatic experiences, as during the COVID‐19 pandemic. This research aims to investigate the correlates and predictors of Post‐traumatic growth (PTG), a positive outcome following adversity, in a group of HCWs during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
Angelone C, Pira GL, Ruini C.
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Shakespeare and media ecology: beyond historicism and presentism [PDF]
This article proposes media ecology-a combination of media studies and performance studies with literary and cultural history-as a research perspective for Shakespeare studies.
Berensmeyer, Ingo
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Issue no 3 / 2016 of Memoria di Shakespeare. A Journal of Shakespearean Studies gathers several different voices on Shakespeare’s language that as a whole contribute to further define the shape of the language he inherited and used, as well as the ...
Plescia, Iolanda
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Discovering Shakespeare in Exile: Spanish Emigrés in England (1819-1840)
The first few decades of the 19th century saw a considerable number of highly educated and professionally qualified Spanish liberals in exile in England.
Ángel-Luis Pujante
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Among Japanese film director Kurosawa Akira’s three Shakespeare films, Throne of Blood (1957), Ran (1985), and The Bad Sleep Well (1960), the latter has been relatively ignored in Anglophone Shakespeare criticism. This article investigates the Anglophone
Stan Reiner van Zon
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Chaucer's Jailer's Daughter [PDF]
textWe know that Shakespeare read Chaucer, but we do not know exactly how he read Chaucer. Established models of source studies require solid "proof," but this paper proposes a more liquid conception of influence that permeates a work in unexpected ways.
Snell, Megan Angela
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Performing Calibanesque Baptisms: Shakespearean Fractals of British Indian History
This paper uncovers new complexity for Shakespearean studies in examining three anecdotes overlooked in related historiography—the first Indian baptism in Britain, that of Peter Pope, in 1616, and its extrapolation in Victorian history as Calibanesque ...
Arup K. Chatterjee
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Maiia Harbuziuk (1965–2023) in Memoriam
This text celebrates the legacy of Maiia Harbuziuk, a distinguished Ukrainian theater critic and scholar who recently passed away before her time. The article highlights her significant contributions to theater studies and her unwavering commitment to ...
Nataliya Torkut
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