Shakespeare and Canada

Remembrance of Ourselves

Ebook

Shakespeare in Canada is the result of a collective desire to explore the role that Shakespeare has played in Canada over the past two hundred years, but also to comprehend the way our country’s culture has influenced our interpretation of his literary career and heritage. What function does Shakespeare serve in Canada today? How has he been reconfigured in different ways for particular Canadian contexts?The authors of this book attempt to answer these questions while imagining what the future might hold for William Shakespeare in Canada. Covering the Stratford Festival, the cult CBC television program Slings and Arrows, major Canadian critics such as Northrop Frye and Marshall McLuhan, the influential acting teacher Neil Freiman, the rise of Québécois and First Nation approaches to Shakespeare, and Shakespeare’s place in secondary schools today, this collection reflects the diversity and energy of Shakespeare’s afterlife in Canada.Collectively, the authors suggest that Shakespeare continues to offer Canadians “remembrance of ourselves.” This is a refreshingly original and impressive contribution to Shakespeare studies—a considerable achievement in any work on the history of one of the central figures in the western literary canon.Published in English.

Table of contents

Table of contents
Cover 1
Title Page 2
Copyright 3
Table of Contents 4
List of Illustrations and Figures 6
Acknowledgements 8
Shakespeare and Canada:“Remembrance of Ourselves” 10
"Theatre is not a nursing home": Merchants of Venice of the Stratford Festival 19
Intercultural Performance and The Stratford Festival as Global Tourist Place: Leon Rubin’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Twelfth Night 35
Stratford, Shakespeare, and J. D. Barnett 57
Counterfactual History at The Stratford Festival: Timothy Findley’s Elizabeth Rexand Peter Hinton’s The Swanne 78
“Who’s There?”: Slings & Arrows’ Audience Dynamics 86
Race, National Identity, and the Hauntological Ethics of Slings & Arrows 103
Performing “Indigenous Shakespeare”in Canada: The Tempest andThe Death of a Chief 116
Shakespeare, a Late Bloomeron the Quebec Stage 131
Mediatic Shakespeare:McLuhan and the Bard 161
Shakespeare and the “Cultural Lag”of Canadian Stratford inAlice Munro’s “Tricks” 181
Beyond (or Beneath) the Folio:Neil Freeman’s Shakespearean ActingPedagogy in Context 202
Rhyme and Reason:Shakespeare’s Exceptional Status andRole in Canadian Education 218
The Truth About Stories AboutShakespeare . . . In Canada? 244
Contributors 266
Index 270