Callaghan, Dympna

Shakespeare without women: representing gender and race on the renaissance stage - London Routledge 2000 - xiii,219p. - Accents on Shakespeare .

Shakespeare Without Women is a controversial study of female impersonation and the connections between dramatic and political representation in Shakespeare's plays. In this exhilarating and challenging book, Callaghan focuses on the implications of absence and exclusion in several of Shakespeare's words. She discusses:
*the exclusion of the female body from Twelfth Night
* the impersonation of the female voice in early performance of the plays
* racial impersonation in Othello
*echoes of the removal of the Gaelic Irish in The Tempest
* the absence of women on stage and in public life as shown in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
This bracing book challenges us not to bemoan the absence of women and racial others in Shakespeare's plays, but to determine what such absences meant in their historical context and why they matter today.

0415202329


English Literature
English Drama

822.33 / CAL/S
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