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The Arden Research Handbook of Shakespeare and Social Justice
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List of Illustrations Notes on Contributors Series Preface Acknowledgements Introduction: “This Is Real Life: Shakespeare and Social Justice as a Field of Play”, David Ruiter (University of Texas at El Paso) Part One: The Shakespeare and Social Justice Interviews 1.1.“Deconstructing Social Hierarchies: Interviews”, Erin Coulehan Chris Anthony (Assistant Professor of Acting at DePaul University, Chicago, USA) Erika Whyman (Deputy Artistic Director at the Royal Shakespeare Company, UK) Arthur Little (Associate Professor, English, UCLA) Ewan Fernie (Professor at the Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham, UK, and Director of the 'Everything to Everybody' Project, UK) Farah Karim-Cooper (Professor of Shakespeare Studies at King’s College London, UK, and Head of Higher Education and Research at Shakespeare's Globe, UK) Part Two: The Practice of Shakespeare and Social Justice 2.1. “Active Shakespeare: A Social Justice Framework” Ayanna Thompson (Arizona State University) and Laura Turchi (University of Houston, USA) 2.2. “Bending Toward Justice: From Shakespeare’s Black Mediterranean to August Wilson’s Black Atlantic”, Peter Erickson (Northwestern University, USA) 2.3.“Black Hamlet, Social Justice, and the Minds of Apartheid”, Arthur Little (UCLA, USA) 2.4.“Shakespeare and Civil Rights: Rhetorical Universalism”, Jason Demeter (Norfolk State University, USA) 2.5.“Shakespeare’s Disabled, Disabled Shakespeare”, Adelle Hulsmeier (University of Sunderland, UK) 2.6.“Social Justice in the Academy: Reflecting on Shakespeare’s Royal Women”, Christie Carson (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK) Part Three: The Performance of Shakespeare and Social Justice 3.1.“William Shakespeare’s Enrique IV, Primera Parte: Common [Battle]Grounds between Medieval England and Mexico’s Present”, Alfredo Modenessi (National University of Mexico) and Paulina Morales (National University of Mexico) 3.2. “King Lear and Gender Justice in India”, Preti Taneja (Newcastle University, UK) 3.3.“Re-enacting Hamlet in South Africa”, Malcolm Cocks (Shakespeare's Globe, UK) 3.4.“‘Shakespeare in Prison’: A South African Social Justice Alternative”, Kevin Quarmby (The College of St. Scholastica) 3.5.“Romeo and Juliet with Chinese Characteristics: Questions of Usefulness and Engagement in 21st Century China”, Julie Sanders (Newcastle University) and Li Jun (University of International Business and Economics) 3.6.“Social Justice, Social Order and Political Power in NTCC’s Adaptation of Richard III”, Chee Keng Lee (Yale-NUS College) Part Four: The Economies of Shakespeare and Social Justice 4.1.“The Empathetic Imagination and the Dream of Equality: Shakespeare’s ‘Poetical Justice’”, Kiernan Ryan (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK) 4.2.“The Idea of Communism in Shakespeare”, Peter Holbrook (University of Queensland, Australia) 4.3.“‘Leftward Ho!’: Shakespeare and Lenin in the Tempest of Class Politics”, Jeffrey Butcher (College of Coastal Georgia) 4.4.“The Visible and the Invisible: Shakespeare and the Question of Social Justice in King Lear”, Geraldo de Sousa (University of Kansas, USA) Annotated Bibliography Index

Promotional Information

This is a wide-ranging, in-depth guide for those beginning or further developing research in Shakespeare and issues of social justice. It includes unique features, from pioneering chapters by leading international scholars and creative adapters, to an overview of resources and exciting opportunities for new research.

About the Author

David Ruiter is Faculty Director of the Teaching + Learning Commons at the University of California, San Diego, USA. He has written on issues of hospitality, intersectionality, translation, globalism and civic theatre, as related to Shakespeare. His teaching has focused on Shakespeare, the history of literary forms, world literature and detective fiction.

Reviews

This progressive and encouraging collection really does assume that Shakespeare’s plays, like the players whom Hamlet welcomes to Elsinore, are ‘the abstracts and brief chronicles of the time’ – of our own times. I hope these essays continue a range of on-going conversations about justice, inclusion, diversity, fairness, and, yes, kindness.
*Rev. Dr Paul Edmondson, The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, UK*

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