2013 - 2014

0811-1078-01
  Shakespeare's Characters:Acts, Images and Identity Politics                                          
FACULTY OF VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
Liora MalkaMexico - Arts120Tue1000-1400 Sem  1
 
 
Course description
 
Othello is a Moor, Shylock is Jewish and his daughter Jessica not only converts to Christianity but also disguises herself as a boy and thus acts like Portia and her cross-dressing performance. Katherina is a shrew who needs to be tamed in order to learn her proper place as a woman, while prince Hamlet is torn between his duties and his personal feelings and desires. These are but few examples to the wealth of intercultural encounters, disguise, cross-dressing, and the struggling between the private self and the public persona that can be found in Shakespeare’s plays. This profusion indicates the importance of self-fashioning and identity issues within both Shakespeare’s work and the Elizabethan culture. The seminar focuses on these issues and the challenges they evoke theatrically and culturally and while taking historical and modern perspectives it aims at examining the ways through which the characters’ features, actions and images complicate matters of identity in the context of nationality, race, gender and sexuality.

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tel aviv university