Books in French are on www.livres-cinema.info
MENU   

Shakespeare, Bakhtin, and Film

A Dialogic Lens

by Keith Harrison

Type
Essays
Subject
TechniqueAdaptation
Keywords
adaptation, Shakespeare
Publishing date
2017
Publisher
Palgrave MacMillan
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover • 272 pages
6 x 8 ¼ inches (15 x 21 cm)
ISBN
978-3-319-59742-3
User Ratings
no rating (0 vote)

Average rating: no rating

0 rating 1 star = We can do without
0 rating 2 stars = Good book
0 rating 3 stars = Excellent book
0 rating 4 stars = Unique / a reference

Your rating: -

Book Presentation:
This book explores how Bakhtin’s ideas can illuminate the compelling but uneasy fusion of Shakespeare and cinema. With a wide variety of tones, languages, cultural orientations, and thematic concerns, film directors have updated, translated, transposed, fragmented, parodied, and geographically re-situated Shakespeare. Keith Harrison illustrates how Bakhtin’s interlinked writings in various fields can fruitfully be applied to an understanding of how the ongoing responsiveness of filmmakers to Shakespeare’s historically remote words can shape self-expressive acts of co-authoring in another medium. Through the use of such Bakhtinian concepts as the chronotope, heteroglossia, the carnivalesque, and polyphony, Harrison details how filmmakers―faithful to their specific cultures, genders, geographies, and historical moments―dialogically locate their particularity through Shakespeare’s presence.

About the Author:
Keith Harrison is Academic Emeritus of English and Creative Writing & Journalism at Vancouver Island University, Canada. He has written two dozen scholarly essays on a variety of topics and has published five novels, including Eyemouth and Furry Creek. His literary papers are held in Special Collections at The Simon Fraser University Library, Canada.

See the publisher website: Palgrave MacMillan

> On a related topic:

15139 books listed   •   (c)2024-2025 cinemabooks.info   •