- Home
- ACADEMIC
- Literary Studies
- Literary Studies - Other
- Shakespeare and Costume
Shakespeare and Costume
Shakespeare and Costume
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
Inspired by new approaches in performance studies, theatre history, research in material culture and dress history, a rich discussion of the many aspects of costume in Shakespearean performance has begun. Shakespeare and Costume furthers this research, bringing together varied and stimulating essays by leading scholars that consider costume from literary, dramatic, design, performative and theatrical perspectives, as well as interviews with renowned theatre practitioners Jane Greenwood and Robert Morgan. The volume amply demonstrates how an analysis of the meaning of costume enriches our understanding of Shakespeare's plays.
Beginning with an overview of the stage history of Shakespeare and costume, the volume looks at the historical context of clothing in the plays, considering topics such as royal self-fashioning, festive livery practices, and conceptions of race and gender exhibited in clothing choice, as well as costume in performance. Drawing on documentary evidence in designers' renderings, illustrations in periodicals, paintings, photographs, newspaper reviews and actors' memoirs, the volume also explores costume designs in specific Shakespeare productions from the re-opening of the London theatres in 1660 to the present day.
Table of Contents
List of illustrations
Acknowledgements
List of contributors
Introduction, Patricia Lennox and Bella Mirabella
Brief Overview: A Stage History of Shakespeare and Costume, Russell Jackson
Part I: Dressing Shakespeare in His Own Time – Theatre, Fashion, and Social Practice
1. 'The Compass of a Lie'? Royal Clothing at Court and in the Plays of Shakespeare, 1598-1613, Maria Hayward, University of Southampton, UK
2. Suits of Green: Festive Livery on Shakespeare's Stage, Erika T. Lin, George Mason University, USA
3. 'Honest Clothes' in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Catherine Richardson, University of Kent, UK
4. How to Do Things with Shoes, Natasha Korda, Wesleyan University, USA
5. 'Apparel oft Proclaims the Man': Dressing Othello on the English Renaissance Stage, Bella Mirabella, NYU Gallatin, USA
Part II: Designing Shakespeare: Theatrical Practice and Costume
6. "The Stylish Shepherd, or, What to Wear in As You Like It's Forest of Arden, Russell Jackson, University of Birmingham, UK
7. How Designers Helped Juliet's Nurse Reclaim her Bawdy, Patricia Lennox, NYU Gallatin, USA
8. Shakespeare Stripped: Costuming Prisoner-of-war Entertainments and Cabaret, Kate Dorney, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK
Part III: Interviews with Contemporary Designers
9. The Designers, Joan Greenwood and Robert Morgan
Notes
Index
Product details
| Published | 26 Feb 2015 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 312 |
| ISBN | 9781472532503 |
| Imprint | The Arden Shakespeare |
| Illustrations | 20 illus |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
The collection is strongest on early modern material … [and] essays on more modern sumptuary topics are enjoyably well informed
Times Literary Supplement
-
A rich resource for the study of what turns out to be frippery in the best sense.
Aoife Monks, Queen Mary University of London, UK, Around the Globe
-
Featured in
NYU Arts Digest
-
[A] rich resource for the study of what turns out to be frippery in the best sense.
Aoife Monks, Around the Globe
-
Mining playtexts, archives, and clothing materials, contributors in Shakespeare and Costume explore what actors wore throughout past centuries, how they used clothing in their performances, and what meaning costumes conveyed. … The essays in this volume give these costumes a voice and students and stage practitioners an ear to understand a lost language through which materially based visual codes once spoke.
Renaissance Quarterly
-
Shakespeare and Costume embodies the diversity of work on dress's interaction with early modern theatre and culture in a series of essays and interviews by an interdisciplinary array of authors … Addressing past, present, and future explorations, editors Patricia Lennox and Bella Mirabella ensure readers gain useful historical context on trends in Shakespearean costume and its analysis, experience multiple analytical perspectives of current research, and also see new avenues for investigation … It encourages a new approach to oft-discussed topics in Shakespeare and theatre studies-race, royalty, festive customs, production design, gender, early modern morality, and so on-through attention to costume. Novices will benefit from a complete read, but seasoned experts will more likely turn to specific essays that pertain to their particular interests. In terms of the field, this book is a welcome garment in an already quite full closet. It asks that when we attend to early modern costume, we look not only at an entire outfit, but also think about the implications of a fabric, a lone headpiece, a single shoe-letting the encompassing nature of “costume” stimulate new avenues of research.
Theatre Survey
ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.























