Shakespeare and Canada
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Edited by:
Irena R. Makaryk
and Kathryn Prince -
With contributions by:
Annie Brisset
, Richard Cavell , Dana Colarusso , Daniel Fischlin , Troni Grande , Peter Kuling , Sarah Mackenzie , C.E. McGee , Don Moore , Ian Rae , Tom Scholte and Kailin Wright
About this book
Author / Editor information
IRENA R. MAKARYK. Professor of English, cross-appointed to Theatre, at the University of Ottawa. Her research interests focus on Shakespeare’s afterlife, Soviet theatre, modernism, and theatre during periods of great social duress. Her most recent book is April in Paris 1925: Theatre, Politics, Space (forthcoming).Prince Kathryn :
KATHRYN PRINCE. Theatre historian at the University of Ottawa, where she is an Associate Professor and, in 2016, recipient of the Excellence in Education prize. Her current work focuses on the practice of emotions in early modern drama. She has published widely on Shakespeare in performance from the seventeenth to the twenty-first centuries.Brisset Annie :
ANNIE BRISSET. Professor emerita, University of Ottawa, School of Translation and Interpretation, FRSC. Prize-winning author on translation, founding member and past president of IATIS (International Association for Translation and Intercultural Studies), consultant to UNESCO on translation-related projects.Cavell Richard :
RICHARD CAVELL. Professor, Department of English, University of British Columbia. Expertise in Canadian cultural studies and cultural memory, Marshall McLuhan, and media theory, and a published playwright.Colarusso Dana :
DANA COLARUSSO. Ontario educator since 1998, with varied roles from high-school English teacher to instructor at Trent and UOIT Faculties of Education. Currently FSL Teacher, Durham Catholic Board of Education. 2010 Dissertation Award from the Canadian Association for Teacher Education for her book Teaching English in the Global Age: Cultural Conversations.Fischlin Daniel :
DANIEL FISCHLIN. University Research Chair, University of Guelph. Founder and Director of the Canadian Adaptations of Shakespeare Project (canadianshakespeares.ca) with numerous publications on Shakespeare in / and Canada.Grande Troni :
TRONI Y. GRANDE. Associate Professor and Head of the English Department at University of Regina, where she teaches Shakespeare, early-modern and eighteenth-century drama, and feminist theory. Her publications include Northrop Frye’s Writings on Shakespeare and the Renaissance (co-edited with Garry Sherbert), Marlovian Tragedy: The Play of Dilation, and two feminist essays on Frye.Kuling Peter :
PETER KULING. Assistant Professor in the Department of Theatre at the University of Ottawa. He has edited issues of Canadian Theatre Review on “Digital Performance” and “Sports and Theatre” while completing his forthcoming monograph Queer Shakespeare
in Canada: Adaptations and Performances of Nationalism and Sexualities.Mackenzie Sarah :
SARAH MACKENZIE. Assistant Professor at the University of New Brunswick, where she teaches Indigenous Literature. Her dissertation examined the ways Indigenous women playwrights address the colonialist legacy of violence against women in contemporary North American contexts. Her academic research interests include Indigenous theatre, postcolonial feminist theory, Canadian history, and Indigenous literatures.McGee C.E. :
C. E. MCGEE. Professor Emeritus in the English Department of the University of Waterloo. A member of the Board of Governors of The Stratford Festival from 1992 to 1999, he continues to serve on its Education and Archives Committee. Besides ongoing work on the New Variorum Othello and the REED Wiltshire and Yorkshire West Riding, he studies productions of Shakespeare’s plays in Canada.Moore Don :
DON MOORE. Instructor, Department of English, University of Guelph. Expertise in literary theory, film studies, and Shakespearean adaptations. He received his PhD in English and Cultural Studies from McMaster University in 2008 for a dissertation interrogating the ethical rhetoric of 9/11. His recent research has focused on the ethics and politics of post-9/11 global cinema and mass media, and on the cultural impacts of intermedial adaptations of Shakespeare.Rae Ian :
IAN RAE. Associate Professor, Department of Modern Languages, King’s University College at Western University. Expertise in Canadian literature, recipient of an Insight Development Grant entitled “Mapping Stratford Culture.”Scholte Tom :
TOM SCHOLTE. Professor in the Department of Theatre and Film at UBC, recipient of Canada Screen Awards as actor/director/writer for theatre and film, with performances on professional stages across Canada and work screened at film festivals including Sundance, TIFF, Rotterdam, and the Berlinale.Wright Kailin :
KAILIN WRIGHT. Assistant Professor, St. Francis Xavier University. Expertise in Canadian drama with research published or forthcoming in Canadian Literature, Studies in Canadian Literature, and Theatre Research in Canada. Her critical edition, The God of Gods: A Canadian Play by Carroll Aikins, was published by the University of Ottawa Press in 2016.
Reviews
The best of these essays provide interesting overviews of how Shakespeare is performed in this country, particularly at Stratford. C. E. McGee’s opening chapter on Stratford’s nine productions of The Merchant of Venice is particularly rewarding for its investigation of how Merchant’s characters have been made to evolve. Robert Ormsby offers a detailed analysis of Stratford’s “multinationalist” productions of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Twelfth Night, cleverly tying director Leon Rubin’s imaginative concepts to Stratford’s role in creating cross-border tourism. Among the other thoughtful contributions are intriguing explorations by Kailin Wright and Don Moore of the CBC’s Slings & Arrows, the TV series inspired by the Stratford Festival; a tough, uncompromising, but gracefully written overview by Sarah Mackenzie of Stratford’s various attempts at acknowledging Indigenous traditions in Canada; and Annie Brisset’s fascinating take on the history of Shakespeare translations and productions in Quebec
Topics
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Frontmatter
I -
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Table of Contents
III -
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List of Illustrations and Figures
V -
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Acknowledgements
VII -
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Shakespeare and Canada: “Remembrance of Ourselves”
1 -
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“Theatre is not a nursing home”: Merchants of Venice of The Stratford Festival
10 -
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Intercultural Performance and The Stratford Festival as Global Tourist Place: Leon Rubin’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Twelfth Night
26 -
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Stratford, Shakespeare, and J. D. Barnett
48 -
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Counterfactual History at The Stratford Festival: Timothy Findley’s Elizabeth Rex and Peter Hinton’s The Swanne
69 -
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“Who’s There?”: Slings & Arrows’ Audience Dynamics
77 -
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Race, National Identity, and the Hauntological Ethics of Slings & Arrows
94 -
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Performing “Indigenous Shakespeare” in Canada: The Tempest and The Death of a Chief
107 -
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Shakespeare, a Late Bloomer on the Quebec Stage
122 -
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Mediatic Shakespeare: McLuhan and the Bard
152 -
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Shakespeare and the “Cultural Lag” of Canadian Stratford in Alice Munro’s “Tricks”
172 -
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Beyond (or Beneath) the Folio: Neil Freeman’s Shakespearean Acting Pedagogy in Context
193 -
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Rhyme and Reason: Shakespeare’s Exceptional Status and Role in Canadian Education
209 -
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The Truth About Stories About Shakespeare . . . In Canada?
235 -
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Contributors
257 -
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Index
261