Worlds Elsewhere (79 page)

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Authors: Andrew Dickson

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Full academic endnotes would make a bulky book even bulkier, but I have printed more detailed references to sources at:
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Prologue and global Shakespeares

PRIMARY SOURCES

Purchas, Samuel,
Hakluytus Posthumus, or Purchas his Pilgrimes,
5 vols (London, 1625).

Rundall, Thomas,
Narratives of Voyages towards the North-West, in Search of a Passage to Cathay and India, 1496–1631
(London, 1849).

SECONDARY SOURCES

Barbour, Richmond,
The Third Voyage Journals: Writing and Performance in the London East India Company, 1607–10
(New York, 2009).

Bate, Jonathan,
The Genius of Shakespeare
(London, 1997).

*Bishop, Tom and Alexander C. Y. Huang (eds),
The Shakespeare International Yearbook 11: Special Issue, Placing Michael Neill – Issues of Place in Shakespeare and Early Modern Culture
(Burlington, VT, 2011).

Brusberg-Kiermeier, Stefani and Jörg Helbig (eds),
Shakespeare in the Media: From the Globe Theatre to the World Wide Web
(Frankfurt-am-Main, 2004).

Chaudhuri, Sukanta and Chee Seng Lim (eds),
Shakespeare Without English: The Reception of Shakespeare in Non-Anglophone Countries
(New Delhi, 2006).

Cunningham, Vanessa,
Shakespeare and Garrick
(Cambridge, 2008).

*Desmet, Christy and Robert Sawyer (eds),
Shakespeare and Appropriation
(London, 1999).

Dionne, Craig and Parmita Kapadia,
Native Shakespeares: Indigenous Appropriations on a Global Stage
(Aldershot, 2008).

Dobson, Michael,
The Making of the National Poet: Shakespeare, Adaptation and Authorship, 1660–1769
(Oxford, 1992).

——,
Shakespeare and Amateur Performance: A Cultural History
(Cambridge, 2011).

Donaldson, Peter, “‘All Which it Inherit”: Shakespeare, Globes and Global Media',
Shakespeare Survey
52 (1999), 183–200.

Edmondson, Paul, Paul Prescott and Erin Sullivan (eds),
A Year of Shakespeare: Reliving the World Shakespeare Festival
(London, 2013).

Gillies, John,
Shakespeare and the Geography of Difference
(Cambridge, 1994).

*Hadfield, Andrew and Paul Hammond (eds),
Shakespeare and Renaissance Europe
(London, 2005).

Hair, P. E. H.,
‘Hamlet
in an Afro-Portuguese Setting: New Perspectives on Sierra Leone in 1607',
History in Africa
5 (1978), 21–42.

Hoenselaars, Ton (ed.),
Shakespeare and the Language of Translation
(London, 2004).

Holderness, Graham and Bryan Loughrey, ‘Arabesque: Shakespeare and Globalisation', in S. Smith (ed.),
Globalization and its Discontents: Writing the Global Culture
(Cambridge, 2006), 24–46.

*Huang, Alexander C. Y., ‘Global Shakespeares as Methodology',
Shakespeare
9 (2013), 273–90.

*Hulme, Peter and William H. Sherman (eds),
‘The Tempest' and its Travels
(Philadelphia, 2000).

Joughin, John J. (ed),
Shakespeare and National Culture
(Manchester, 1997).

Kennedy, Dennis,
Foreign Shakespeare: Contemporary Performance
(Cambridge, 1993).·

Kerr, Heather, Robin Eaden and Madge Mitton (eds),
Shakespeare: World Views
(Newark, DE, 1996).

Kliman, Bernice W., ‘At Sea about
Hamlet
at Sea: A Detective Story',
Shakespeare Quarterly
62 (2011), 180–204.

*Loomba, Ania,
Shakespeare, Race and Colonialism
(Oxford, 2002).

Loomba, Ania and Martin Orkin (eds),
Post-Colonial Shakespeares
(London, 1998).

Maquerlot, Jean-Pierre and Michèle Willems (eds),
Travel and Drama in Shakespeare's Time
(Cambridge, 1996).

Marshall, Gail,
Shakespeare in the Nineteenth Century
(Cambridge, 2012).

*Massai, Sonia (ed.),
World-Wide Shakespeares: Local Appropriations in Film and Performance
(London, 2005).

Prescott, Paul and Erin Sullivan (eds),
Shakespeare on the Global Stage: Performance and Festivity in the Olympic Year
(London, 2015).

Rebellato, Dan,
Theatre and Globalization
(Basingstoke, 2009).

Robins, Nick,
The Corporation that Changed the World: How the East India Company Shaped the Modern Multinational
(London, 2006).

Shapiro, James,
Shakespeare and the Jews
(New York, 1996).

Taylor, Gary,
‘Hamlet
in Africa 1607', in Ivo Kamps and Jyotsna Singh (eds),
Travel Knowledge: European ‘Discoveries' in the Early Modern Period
(London, 2001).

——,
Reinventing Shakespeare: A Cultural History from the Restoration to the Present
(New York, 1989).

Trivedi, Poonam and Minami Ryuta (eds),
Re-playing Shakespeare in Asia
(London, 2010).

Poland and Germany

PRIMARY SOURCES

Bate, Jonathan (ed.),
The Romantics on Shakespeare
(Harmondsworth, 1992).

Freiligrath, Ferdinand,
Freiligraths Werke in Einem Band,
ed. Werner Ilberg (Berlin, 1980).

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von,
Early Verse Drama and Prose Plays,
ed. Cyrus Hamlin and Frank Ryder (Princeton, NJ, 1995).

——,
Faust I and II,
trans. Stuart Atkins (Princeton, NJ, 1994).

——,
Goethe on Shakespeare,
trans. Michael Hofmann and David Constantine (London, 2010).

——,
The Sorrows of Young Werther,
trans. David Constantine (Oxford, 2012).

——,
Verse Plays and Epic,
ed. Cyrus Hamlin and Frank Ryder (Princeton, NJ, 1994).

——,
Wilhelm Meister,
trans. Thomas Carlyle, 2 vols (London, 1894).

Halliday, Andrew, ‘Shakespeare-Mad',
All the Year Round,
11 (21 May 1864), 345–51.

Jones, Henry Arthur,
Shakespeare and Germany: Written During the Battle of Verdun
(London, 1916).

Le Winter, Oswald (ed.),
Shakespeare in Europe: Selections from Lessing, Voltaire, Goethe, etc.
(Harmondsworth, 1970).

Moryson, Fynes,
Shakespeare's Europe: Unpublished Chapters of Fynes Moryson's Itinerary,
ed. Charles Hughes (London, 1903).

Müller, Heiner,
‘Die Hamletmaschine',
in
Adaptations of Shakespeare: A Critical Anthology of Plays,
ed. Daniel Fischlin and Mark Fortier (London, 2000), 208–15.

——,
Heiner Müller After Shakespeare: Macbeth and Anatomy of Titus – Fall of Rome,
ed. Carl Weber (New York, 2012).

Schiller, Friedrich,
Five Plays,
trans. Robert David MacDonald (London, 1998).

SECONDARY SOURCES

Barnett, David, ‘Resisting the Revolution: Heiner Müller's
Hamlet/Machine
at the Deutsches Theater, Berlin, March 1990',
Theatre Research International
31 (2006), 188–200.

Bate, Jonathan, ‘The Politics of Romantic Shakespearean Criticism: Germany, England, France',
European Romantic Review
1 (1990), 1–26.

Bonnell, Andrew G.,
Shylock in Germany: Antisemitism and the German Theatre from the Enlightenment to the Nazis
(London, 2008).

Boyle, Nicholas and John Guthrie (eds),
Goethe and the English-Speaking World: A Cambridge Symposium for his 250th Anniversary
(Columbia, SC, 2001).

Cohn, Alfred,
Shakespeare in Germany in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
(London and Berlin, 1865).

*Foulkes, Richard,
The Shakespeare Tercentenary of 1864
(London, 1984).

Gadberry, Glen W. (ed.),
Theatre in the Third Reich, the Prewar Years: Essays on Theatre in Nazi Germany
(Westport, CT, 1995).

Habicht, Werner, ‘Shakespeare Celebrations in Time of War',
Shakespeare Quarterly
52 (2001), 441–55.

*——, ‘Shakespeare in Nineteenth-Century Germany: The Making of a Myth', in
Nineteenth-Century Germany: A Symposium,
ed. Modris Eksteins and Hildegard Hammerschmidt (Tübingen, 1983), 141–57.

——,‘Topoi of the Shakespeare Cult in Germany', in
Literature and its Cults: An Anthropological Approach,
ed. Péter Dávidházi and Judit Karafíath (Budapest, 1994), 47–65.

*Hortmann, Wilhelm,
Shakespeare on the German Stage: The Twentieth Century
(Cambridge, 1998).

Howard, Tony,
Women as Hamlet: Performance and Interpretation in Theatre, Film and Fiction
(Cambridge, 2007).

*Jansohn, Christa (ed.),
German Shakespeare Studies at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century
(Newark, DE, 2006).

Korte, Barbara and Christina Spittel, ‘Shakespeare under Different Flags: The Bard in German Classrooms from Hitler to Honecker',
Journal of Contemporary History
44 (2009), 267–86.

Larson, Kenneth E., ‘The Origins of the Schlegel-Tieck Shakespeare in the 1820s',
The German Quarterly
60 (1987), 19–37.

*Limon, Jerzy,
Gentlemen of a Company: English Players in Central and Eastern Europe, 1590–1660
(Cambridge, 1985).

London, John,
Theatre Under the Nazis
(Manchester, 2000).

Longerich, Peter,
Goebbels: A Biography
(London, 2015).

Makaryk, Irena R. and Marissa McHugh (eds),
Shakespeare and the Second World War: Memory, Culture, Identity
(Toronto, 2012).

Murphy, Andrew,
Shakespeare for the People: Working-Class Readers, 1800–1900
(Cambridge, 2008).

Pascal, Roy,
Shakespeare in Germany, 1740–1815
(Cambridge, 1937).

*Paulin, Roger (ed.),
The Critical Reception of Shakespeare in Germany, 1682–1914: Native Literature and Foreign Genius
(Hildesheim, 2003).

——,
Great Shakespeareans: Voltaire, Goethe, Schlegel, Coleridge
(London, 2010).

Pfister, Manfred, ‘Germany is Hamlet: The History of a Political Interpretation',
New Comparison
2 (1986), 106–26.

——, ‘Hamlets Made in Germany, East and West', in
Shakespeare in the New Europe,
ed. Michael Hattaway et al. (Sheffield, 1994) 76–91.

Sillars, Stuart,
Shakespeare and the Victorians
(Oxford, 2013).

Stříbrný, Zdeněk,
Shakespeare and Eastern Europe
(Oxford, 2000).

Strobl, Gerwin,
The Swastika and the Stage: German Theatre and Society, 1933–45
(Cambridge, 2007).

Stroedel, Wolfgang, ‘90th Anniversary Celebration of the Deutsche Shakespeare-Gesellschaft',
Shakespeare Quarterly
5 (1954), 317–22.

Symington, Rodney,
The Nazi Appropriation of Shakespeare: Cultural Politics in the Third Reich
(Lewiston, NY, 2005).

*Williams, Simon,
Shakespeare on the German Stage: 1586–1914
(Cambridge, 1990).

FILMS

Hamlet: Ein Rachedrama,
dir. Sven Gade (Germany, 1921).

United States

PRIMARY SOURCES

Borthwick, J. D.,
Three Years in California
(Edinburgh, 1857).

Emerson, Ralph Waldo,
Essays and Poems,
ed. Joel Porte, Harold Bloom and Paul Kane (New York, 1996).

Leman, Walter,
Memories of an Old Actor
(San Francisco, 1886).

Ludlow, Noah,
Dramatic Life as I Found It
(St Louis, MO, 1880).

Nelson, Richard,
How Shakespeare Won the West
(New York, 2010).

Shapiro, James (ed.),
Shakespeare in America: An Anthology from the Revolution to Now
(New York, 2014).

Smiley, Jane,
A Thousand Acres
(New York, 1991).

Smith, Solomon Franklin,
Theatrical Management in the West and South for Thirty Years
(New York, 1868).

Tocqueville, Alexis de,
Democracy in America,
trans. Harvey Claflin Mansfield and Delba Winthrop (Chicago, 2000).

The True Tragedie of Richard the Third
(London, 1594).

SECONDARY SOURCES

Ashley, Mabel Celeste, ‘Gold Rush Theatre in Nevada City, California', unpublished MA thesis, Stanford University (1967).

Berson, Misha,
The San Francisco Stage: From Gold Rush to Golden Spike, 1849–69
(San Francisco, 1989).

——,
The San Francisco Stage: From Golden Spike to Great Earthquake, 1869–1906
(San Francisco, 1992).

Bristol, Michael D.,
Shakespeare's America, America's Shakespeare
(London, 1990).

Burnett, Mark Thornton, ‘Parodying with Richard', in Sarah Hatchuel and Nathalie Vienne-Guerrin (eds),
Shakespeare on Screen: Richard III
(Rouen, 2005), 91–112.

Carrell, Jennifer Lee, ‘How the Bard Won the West',
Smithsonian
29/5 (August, 1998), 99–107.

Cliff, Nigel,
The Shakespeare Riots: Revenge, Drama and Death in Nineteenth-Century America
(New York, 2007).

Curry, Jane Kathleen,
Nineteenth-Century American Women Theatre Managers
(Westport, CN, 1994).

Davidson, Levette J., ‘Shakespeare in the Rockies',
Shakespeare Quarterly
4 (1953), 39–49.

Dawson, Giles E.,
History of the Folger Shakespeare Library, 1932–68,
unpublished typescript (1994).

Dunn, Esther Cloudman,
Shakespeare in America
(New York, 1939).

Engler, Balz, ‘Shakespeare, Washington, Lincoln: The Folger Library and the American Appropriation of the Bard' [
https://shine.unibas.ch/shine_folger.htm
].

Ferington, Esther (ed.),
Infinite Variety: Exploring the Folger Shakespeare Library
(Washington DC, 2002).

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