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Interlinguicity Internationality And Shakespeare 1st Edition Michael Saenger

  • SKU: BELL-36902536
Interlinguicity Internationality And Shakespeare 1st Edition Michael Saenger
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Interlinguicity Internationality And Shakespeare 1st Edition Michael Saenger instant download after payment.

Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 12.06 MB
Pages: 296
Author: Michael Saenger
ISBN: 9780773544734, 0773544739
Language: English
Year: 2015
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Interlinguicity Internationality And Shakespeare 1st Edition Michael Saenger by Michael Saenger 9780773544734, 0773544739 instant download after payment.

Languages have become more mobile than ever before, producing translations, transplantations, and cohabitations of all kinds. The early modern period also witnessed profound linguistic transformation, but in very different ways. Interlinguicity, Internationality, and Shakespeare undoes the illusion that Shakespeare wrote in what we now think of as English. In a series of essays approaching Shakespeare from unique and thought-provoking perspectives, contributors from history, performance criticism, and comparative literature look at "interlinguicity," the condition of being between languages, and "internationality," the condition of being between countries. Each essay focuses on local issues, such as community identification in the Netherlands of Shakespeare’s time and the appropriation of Shakespeare in German literature in the nineteenth century, to suggest that Shakespeare never wrote "in" English because English was not then, nor is it now, an intact, knowable system. Many languages existed in sixteenth-century London, and English did not have clear limits. Interlinguicity, Internationality, and Shakespeare helps to explain the hybridity that Shakespeare embraced in all his writing. Contributors include Paula Blank (College of William and Mary), Lauren Coker (Saint Louis University), Brian Gingrich (Princeton University), Alexa Huang (George Washington University), James Loehlin (University of Texas at Austin), Scott Newstok (Rhodes College), Patricia Parker (Stanford University), Elizabeth Pentland (York University), Philip Schwyzer (University of Exeter), Gary Waite (University of New Brunswick), and Robert N. Watson (University of California, Los Angeles)

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