Did you know that Ovid was a multifaceted icon of lovesickness, endless change, libertinism, emotional torment and violence in early modern England? This is the first collection to use adaptation studies in connection with other contemporary...
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Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
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Did you know that Ovid was a multifaceted icon of lovesickness, endless change, libertinism, emotional torment and violence in early modern England? This is the first collection to use adaptation studies in connection with other contemporary theoretical approaches in analysing early modern transformations of Ovid. It provides innovative perspectives on the 'Ovids' that haunted the early modern stage, while exploring intersections between adaptation theory and gender/queer/trans studies, ecofeminism, hauntology, transmediality, rhizomatics and more. This book examines the multidimensional, ubiquitous role that Ovid and Ovidian adaptations played in English Renaissance drama and theatrical performance. -- Publisher website
Lisa S. Starks: Introduction: Representing "Ovids" on the early modern English stage /
Simone Chess: Queer gender informants in Ovid and Shakespeare /
Shannon Kelley: Women in trees: adapting Ovid for John Lyly's Love's metamorphosis (1589) /
Daniel G. Lauby: Queer fidelity: Marlowe's Ovid and the staging of desire in Dido, Queen of Carthage /
Deborah Uman: "Let Rome in Tiber melt": hermaphroditic transformation in Antonius and Antony and Cleopatra /
Lisa S. Starks: Ovid's ghosts: lovesickness, theatricality, and Ovidian spectrality on the early modern English stage /
John S. Garrison: Medea's afterlife: encountering Ovid in The tempest /
Catherine Winiarski: Remnants of Virgil, Ovid, and Paul in Titus Andronicus /
Jennifer Feather: Power, emotion, and appropriation in Ovid's Tristia and Shakespeare's Henry V /
John D. Staines: Appropriating Ovid's tyrannical raptures in Macbeth /
Goran Stanivukovic: Ovid and the styles of adaptation in The two gentlemen of Verona /
Louise Geddes: "Truly, and very notably discharg'd": the metamorphosis of Pyramus and Thisbe and the place of appropriation on the early modern stage /
Liz Oaklye-Brown: The golden age rescored?: Ovid's Metamorphoses and Thomas Heywood's The ages /
Ed Gieskes: "Materia conveniente modis": early modern dramatic adaptations of Ovid /
Jim Casey.: Worse then Philomel, worse than Actaeon: hyperreal Ovid in Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus /