Description
This volume provides up-to-date coverage of recent screen versions of Shakespeare's plays, as well as critical reviews of older canonical films.
About the Author
Sarah Hatchuel is Professor of English Literature and Film and Head of the Groupe de Recherche Identites et Cultures (GRIC) at the University of Le Havre, as well as President of the Societe Francaise Shakespeare. She has written extensively on adaptations of Shakespeare's plays, including Shakespeare and the Cleopatra/Caesar Intertext: Sequel, Conflation, Remake (2011), Shakespeare, from Stage to Screen (Cambridge, 2004), and A Companion to the Shakespearean Films of Kenneth Branagh (2000), and has also written on television series, including Lost: Fiction vitale (2013) and Reves et series americaines: la fabrique d'autres mondes (2015). She is Co-editor-in-chief of the online journal TV/Series. Nathalie Vienne-Guerrin is Professor in Shakespeare studies at Universite Paul Valery, Montpellier and Director of the Institut de Recherche sur la Renaissance, l'age Classique et les Lumieres. She is co-editor-in-chief of the international journal Cahiers Elisabethains and Co-director (with Patricia Dorval) of the Shakespeare on Screen in Francophonia Database (shakscreen.org). She has published The Unruly Tongue in Early Modern England, Three Treatises (2012) and is the author of Shakespeare's Insults: A Pragmatic Dictionary (2016). She is Co-editor of the online journal Arret sur Scene/Scene Focus.
Reviews
'... Hatchuel and Vienne-Guerrin's volume offers a variety of effectively overlapping essays in which specific plays - or in this case, groups of plays - are examined from different points of view. The comparative rarity of feature film and television versions of the plays discussed in this volume allows for ... particularly effective cross-referencing from essay to essay on the well-known films ...' Russell Jackson, Shakespeare Survey
Book Information
ISBN 9781107113503
Author Sarah Hatchuel
Format Hardback
Page Count 330
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 670g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 157mm * 20mm