Tytuł pozycji:
Shakespeare in History, History through Shakespeare: Caliban by the Yellow Sands
- Tytuł:
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Shakespeare in History, History through Shakespeare: Caliban by the Yellow Sands
- Autorzy:
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Śmiałkowska, Monika
- Powiązania:
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https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/648281.pdf
- Data publikacji:
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2007
- Wydawca:
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Uniwersytet Łódzki. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
- Źródło:
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Multicultural Shakespeare: Translation, Appropriation and Performance; 2007, 4
2083-8530
2300-7605
- Język:
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nieokreślony
- Prawa:
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Wszystkie prawa zastrzeżone. Swoboda użytkownika ograniczona do ustawowego zakresu dozwolonego użytku
- Dostawca treści:
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Biblioteka Nauki
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Przejdź do źródła  Link otwiera się w nowym oknie
Percy MacKaye’s community masque, Caliban by the Yellow Sands, was performed
in front of thousands of spectators between May 24th and June 5th, 1916 at New York
Lewisohn Stadium, as part of American celebrations of the three-hundredth
anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. The play is a fascinating example of a
Shakespearean appropriation intended for a particular historical moment and specific
socio-political purposes. Not only does it comment on America’s contemporary
situation, but also intervenes in it, proposing solutions to current problems, most
notably the huge increase of immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe. This
paper investigates two interconnected methods which Caliban by the Yellow Sands
employs to respond to the historical moment: the play’s representations of history and
its uses of Shakespeare and the Shakespearean canon. It argues that, while the main
thrust of the masque is an attempt to harness Shakespeare’s cultural authority in the
service of promoting American cohesion based on the alleged supremacy of the
Anglo-Saxon cultural heritage, the text reveals significant ambiguities and
contradictions that this operation produces. Shakespeare’s art is shown as a force that
can both liberate and subjugate, and Shakespeare as a curiously insubstantial and
malleable figure, whose work only fully comes into being with each interpretation and
is available for different kinds of appropriation. Despite glorifying the Bard, the
masque simultaneously empties him of inherent meaning and transfers his power to
those who interpret him.