We use cookies to provide essential features and services. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies .

×

Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Shakespeare, Italy and Intertextuality
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Intertextualizing Shakespeare’s text – Michelle Marrapodi

Part I: Theory and practice
2. Seven types of intertextuality – Robert S. Miola
3. English bodies in Italian habits – Keir Alam
4. Shakespeare and Plutarch: intertextuality in action – Alessandro Serpieri
5. ‘Voilà la belle mort’: the crisis of the aristocracy in Troilus and Cressida – Mario Domenichelli

Part II: Culture and tradition
6. Beyond the Reformation: Italian intertexts of the ransom plot in Measure for Measure – Michelle Marrapodi
7. ‘The story is extant and writ in very choice Italian’: Shakespeare’s dramatizations of Cinthio – Jason Lawrence
8. Intertextual transformations: the novella as mediator between Italian and English Renaissance drama – Charlotte Pressler
9. Shakespeare’s Italian intertexts: The Taming of the/a Shrew – Fernando Cioni

Part III: Text and ideology
10. ‘What news on the Rialto’: luxury, sodomy, and miscegenation in The Merchant of Venice – Anthony G. Barthelmy
11. Othello italicized: xenophobia and the erosion of tragedy – Pamela Allen Brown
12. The politics of plot: Measure for Measure and the Italianate disguised duke play – Michael J. Redmond
13. ‘The three-fold world divided’: Julius Caesar in the light of Theologia Platonica – Claudia Corti

Part IV: Stage and spectacle
14. Cleopatra’s barge and Antony’s body: Italian sources and English theatre – J. R. Mulryne
15. Intertextuality and the chess motif: Shakespeare, Middleton, Greenaway – Jeffrey A. Netto
16. ‘Rare Italian master(s)’: Roman art in Romeo and Juliet, Antony and Cleopatra, and The Winter’s Tale – François Laroque
17. Shakespeare in the bottega: art works, apocrypha, and the stage – Giorgio Melchiori
18. Afterword: Italy as intertext – Keir Elam

Index

About the Author

Michele Marrapodi is Full Professor of English Literature in the Department of Scienze Umanistiche at the University of Palermo

Reviews

'Represents an important addition not only to earlier studies on Italian influences in early
modern English literature and culture but also to a new, genuinely interdisciplinary
understanding.'
Sonia Masai, Shakespeare Quarterly (2006)

'An impressive collection of critical essays.... written by an international team of respected critics.'
Alexander Shurbanov, English Studies (2007)

'As editor, no one is more qualified than Marrapodi to resume the inquiry set forth in the previous collections.'
Kyna Hamill, Theatre Journal (2007)
*.*

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top