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Full Description
Examines Shakespeare fragments as agents of appropriation
Drawing on new materialism and object-oriented ontology, Variable Objects proposes that Shakespeare is a vibrant object replete with a variable energy that accounts for its infinite meaning-making capacity. Using critical race theory, object oriented feminism, performance studies, Global Shakespeares, media studies and game theory, the collection's essays explore the dialogic relationship between the Shakespeare object and its appropriation. Each chapter demonstrates that instead of moving away from the source of appropriation, an object-oriented approach can centralise Shakespeare without the constraints of outdated notions of fidelity. Highlighting the variable materiality inherent in Shakespeare, the collection foregrounds the political ecologies of literary objects as a new methodology for adaptation studies.
Contents
List of IllustrationsContributorsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Bound in a Nutshell: Shakespeare's Vibrant Matter, Valerie M. Fazel and Louise Geddes
PART I: DISCIPLINARY OBJECTS
Beds, Handkerchiefs, and Moving Objects in Othello, Sujata Iyengar
The Collectible Ofelia: Object-Oriented Feminisms and the Un-Human Corpus of Q1's Dispensaniac, Molly Seremet
Bitcoin, Blockchains, and the Bard, Robert Sawyer
PART II: MEDIA OBJECTS
'Were I human:' Beingness and the Postcolonial Object in Westworld's Appropriation of The Tempest, L. Monique Pittman, Vanessa I. Corredera, Kristin N. Denslow, Karl G. Bailey
Finding Ludonarrative Harmony in the Limited Agency of Ophelia in Elsinore, Andrew Darr
Sympathise with the Losers: Performing Intellectual Loserdom in Shakespearian Biopic, Anna Blackwell
Prosthetic Properties: The Materiality of Race and Gender in The Hollow Crown: The Wars of the Roses, Emily MacLeod
PART III: HUMAN OBJECTS
'Intermission!': Reading Race in the Objects of Key & Peele's 'Othello Tis My Shite', Shanelle E. Kim
Sight Unseen: Visualizing variability through ontological representations in Macbeth', Valerie Clayman Pye and Cara Gargano
The Thing Itself: Performance and the Celebrity Text, Louise Geddes
11. 'The Promised End': Shakespeare and Extinction, Michael Lutz