Transversal enterprises in the drama of Shakespeare and his contemporaries Fugitive explorations /

This study expands on Reynolds' 'transversal poetics' - the theory, methodology, and aesthetics developed in response to the need for an approach that fosters agency, creativity and conscientious scholarship and pedagogy. It offers new readings of plays by, amongst others, Shakespeare...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reynolds, Bryan.
Published:
Literature type: Electronic Software eBook
Language: English
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Online Access: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230584570
Summary: This study expands on Reynolds' 'transversal poetics' - the theory, methodology, and aesthetics developed in response to the need for an approach that fosters agency, creativity and conscientious scholarship and pedagogy. It offers new readings of plays by, amongst others, Shakespeare, Marlowe, Middleton, Webster and Greene.
'An original social theory and research methodology that draws on cultural anthropology, cognitive science, and physics as well as phenomenology and materialism, 'transversal poetics' is Bryan Reynolds' brilliant response to the need for more politically charged, inclusive, and witty critical inquiry. This book will not only be enormously valuable to students and scholars of early modern English theatre and culture, but it will also be one with which future scholarship in these fields will have to contend.' - Patrice Pavis, Professor of Theatre, University of Paris VIII-Saint-Denis, France 'Bryan Reynolds and his collaborators have produced an ambitious and energetic reformulation of the relations between culture and politics. This lively and accessible book offers 'transversalism' as a nuanced and responsive key to the interpretation of literary texts.' - Professor Alan Sinfield, University of Sussex, UK 'The transversal Shakespeare is the endlessly galvanizing Shakespeare, always offering new resources for individual agency and cultural transformation. Transversal Enterprises in the Drama of Shakespeare and His Contemporaries is driven by the determination of Bryan Reynolds and his collaborators to breathe new life into the Shakespeare criticism of our time. They incorporate and transform the critical theory we have inherited while expanding the frame to include new developments in performance theory, historical criticism, and the 'genetics' of culture. Eclectic, synthetic, and free-wheeling rather than monolithic, the book provocatively deploys its own 'transversal' vocabulary while challenging us to read afresh - and respond energetically - at every turn. Love it or hate it, this is a 'next generation' book.' - Professor Jonathan Crewe, Dartmouth University, USA 'The book offers a valuable language of analysis and argument for so many different fields of study-but perhaps most pointedly to those interested in the question of adaptation, or in how texts accrete significance as they travel or are successively performed (in all senses).' - Dr. Julian Yates, University of Delaware, USA '...one of the most sophisticated and important theoretical treatments of early modern literature that has emerged since the decline of New Historicism.' - Paul Cefalu, Shakespeare Quarterly '...a brilliant book, used by scholars and being read in graduate theatre theory and Jacobean drama courses everywhere... Bryan Reynolds has a new, if I might even say, American theory, which endorses potential.' - Professor Marianne McDonald, University of California, San Diego, USA 'This book is a stimulating intervention into theoretical debates on Shakespeare. It is provocative, theoretically daring and critically adventurous. Reynolds and his collaborators write about Shakespeare and theory in ways which will create heated debates in conferences and postgraduate seminars and will fuel undergraduate students' critical imaginations. Essays on topics such as the 'werewolf within' and 'R&J Space' will engage students by showing them how critical approaches to Shakespeare's work can be both contemporary and creative. This book will be essential reading for anyone interested in theorising the work of Shakespeare and his contemporaries in performance.' - Professor Stuart Hampton-Reeves, University of Central Lancashire, UK '...a virtual amusement park of intellectual excitement. Even though clearly developed themes (consciousness, phenomenology, accountability, space) weave the book together, each chapter offers a separate experience, a distinct ride into some other uncharted region of early modern English history.' - Professor Mihaela Irimia, University of Bucharest, Romania 'Witty, lively and original in conception and execution, Bryan Reynolds and his co-authors have reanimated canonical Shakespearean and Renaissance drama by reading them uncannily in relation both to the more familiar critical practices of historicism and psychoanalysis and the stranger practices of neuroscience, memetics and primatology. Perhaps the most exciting achievement of the book lies in the varied ways its collaborating authors have transformed their writing as well as the field of Shakespeare and Renaissance studies.' - Professor Richard Burt, University of Florida, USA 'Authorities beware! Bryan Reynolds and his co-conspirators are on the loose again... Armed with a new critical approach called transversal poetics complete with a lexical arsenal developed by Reynolds himself, these fugitive explorers are bent on discovering and exposing the nooks and crannies of poststructuralist theory, cultural studies, performance theory, audience response theory and a host of other established fields. Radical in their desire to unite text-centred approaches such as deconstruction with recent innovations in historicist fields such as cultural studies, Reynolds and his space invaders have found new ways to investigate resistance to authority in a variety of early modern t
Item Description: Ebook.
Originally published in: 2006.
Carrier Form: 288 p.
ISBN: 9781403932112
9780230584570 :
0230584578 :
CLC: I11
Contents: List of Figures Acknowledgements Transversal Poetics and Fugitive Explorations: Theaterspace, Paused Consciousness, Subjunctivity, and Macbeth-- B.Reynolds The Reckoning of Moll Cutpurse: Transversal Reimaginings of The Roaring Girl-- B.Reynolds & J.Segal The Delusion of Critique: Subjunctive Space, Transversality, and the Conceit of Deceit in Hamlet-- A.Kubiak & B.Reynolds Comedic Law: Projective Transversality, Deceit Conceits, and the Conjuring of Macbeth and Doctor Faustus in Jonson's The Devil is an Ass-- A.Cook & B.Reynolds I Might Like You Better if We Slept Together: The Historical Drift of Place in The Changeling-- D.Hedrick & B.Reynolds Fugitive Explorations in Romeo and Juliet: Searching for Transversality inside the Goldmine of R&Jspace-- B.Reynolds & J.Segal Viewing Antitheatricality: or, Tamburlaine's Post-Theatrics-- B.Reynolds & A.Thompson Becomings Roman/Comings-to-be Villain: Pressurized Belongings and the Coding of Ethnicity, Religion, and Nationality in Peele and Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus-- G.Odom & B.Reynolds Awakening the Werewolf Within: Self-help, Vanishing Mediation, and Transversality in The Duchess of Malfi-- C.Lehmann & B.Reynolds Performative Transversations: Collaborations Through and Beyond Green's Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay-- B.Reynolds & H.S.Turner Afterword: Re: conaissance-- B.Smith A Very Short List of Writings Significant to the Developmental of Transversal Poetics Notes on the Collaborators Index Index.