Adapting, Performing and Reviewing Shakespearean Comedy
in a European Context
Interdisciplinary Symposium at the Institute of Modern Languages
Research (IMLR), London, Thursday 12 and Friday 13 June 2014
This two-day symposium brings together practitioners, reviewers and
academics to generate a focused debate on the transnational and
regional aspects of humour and its manifestation in Shakespeare?s
texts and adaptations. Events such as the World Shakespeare Festival,
as well as international Shakespeare festivals and the increase in
international tours of Shakespeare productions, continually raise the
issue of ?International Shakespeares? vs ?local culture(s)? ? a key
concern of this symposium.
The event concentrates on the text, performance, and reviewing of
Shakespeare?s comedies in a European context. We invite proposals for
15-minute papers and provocations that will contribute to and spark
focused panel discussions. We also welcome proposals for performances
and workshops focusing on the practical exploration of the
interrelationship between humour, Shakespearean text and adaptation,
performance and reviewing.
Confirmed keynote contributors include:
Prof. Tom Bishop, University of Auckland
Niels Brunse, translator
Prof. Michael Dobson, Shakespeare Institute
Mark Fisher, theatre critic (The Guardian, The Scotsman and others)
Dr. Steve Purcell, University of Warwick & Pantaloons
Dr. P.A. Skantze, University of Roehampton
Contributions are invited on topics in the following areas:
1) ?Comedy and Culture: The Starting Point?
Papers in this section should explore the underlying relationship
between humour and culture. Questions to be asked could include: Which
aspects of humour are universal/which are dependent on cultural
context? How does Shakespearean comedy reflect the interrelationship
of humour and culture?
2) ?Adapting Across Cultures?
Concentrating on textual adaptation, contributions to this panel could
address issues of language, translation, surtitling, and dramaturgy,
as well as historical dimensions of textual practice and adaptation.
3) ?Performing Across Cultures?
This panel could consider issues of ?transnational? performance, e.g.
local vs. global audiences; audience and humour; transgeneric forms
and humour (especially where comedies are played as tragedies and
vice-versa), as well as Shakespeare and community/citizenship.
4) ?Reviewing Across Cultures?
This panel could consider the art of the review; national styles of
reviewing; the institutionalisation of reviewing; print versus new
media, and festival reviewing. It could also compare local, national
and ?transnational? reviews (i.e. reviews of touring productions).
Please send 200-word abstracts with a 50-word biography by 15th
February 2014 to the following address:
[log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
Please indicate whether you want to contribute a 15-minute paper or a
workshop / performance piece.
The organisers:
Aneta Mancewicz (University of Bedfordshire); Emily Oliver (King?s
College London); Aleksandra Sakowska (London Shakespeare Centre);
Benedict Schofield (King?s College London); Godela Weiss-Sussex
(Institute of Modern Languages Research).
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Dr Benedict Schofield
Senior Lecturer in German
Senior Tutor, School of Arts and Humanities
King's College London
Follow me on Twitter @haben_und_soll
Recent publications:
Private Lives and Collective Destinies. Class, Nation and the Folk in
the Works of Gustav Freytag (London: MHRA, 2012)
"a real and lasting contribution to nineteenth-century scholarship"
? German Quarterly
ed. with C. Woodford, The German Bestseller in the Late Nineteenth
Century (New York: Camden House, 2012)
?Handsomely produced and expertly edited [?] often fascinating and
always informative?
? Times Literary Supplement
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