Revenge is Mad Hard: Fat Ham and the Question of Cultural Reclamation

Author:   Valerie Clayman Pye ,  Danielle Rosvally
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
ISBN:  

9783031978869


Pages:   292
Publication Date:   06 January 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Revenge is Mad Hard: Fat Ham and the Question of Cultural Reclamation


Overview

In April of 2021, a small theatre in Philadelphia took a big risk: The Wilma premiered a new play called Fat Ham by a then-almost-unknown playwright, James Ijames. Fat Ham reconfigures the story of Hamlet through the lens of a family barbeque in the American South. In Ijames’ play, Shakespeare’s protagonist becomes a fat, queer, Black man named Juicy. Juicy’s mother has just married his uncle in the wake of his father’s murder and Juicy himself is still dealing with grief about these events and the generational trauma they amplify as he strives for some thread of hope. The play made big waves; Ijames won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and it was nominated for five Tony awards in 2023. Fat Ham represents a major intervention in the ways we discuss storytelling, adaptation, and canon as it reclaims a major piece of cultural capital for several intersections of marginalized voices. This collection of essay offers perspectives on the play’s early life as well as creates a major theoretical framework for future discussions of Fat Ham in scholarship.The essay featured in Revenge is Mad Hard: Fat Ham and the Question of Cultural Reclamation address the intersecting themes of Adaptation, Performance, Identity, and Southerness. Each of these sections work to more fully specify and develop the themes of Fat Ham in the greater sphere of literary and performance studies.

Full Product Details

Author:   Valerie Clayman Pye ,  Danielle Rosvally
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN:  

9783031978869


ISBN 10:   3031978862
Pages:   292
Publication Date:   06 January 2026
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1:Introduction: Who’s There?: Black Storytelling Legacies, Theatrical Histories, and Fat Ham.-Section One: Dramaturgy.-Chapter 2-“I been ghosting for a full week. I know how this work”: Ghosting, Text, and Digital Fat Ham as Pandemic Praxis.-Chapter 3- Repurposing Hamlet: James Ijames’s Fat Ham Spells Autumn for the Patriarchs.-Chapter 4-Karaoke Dreaming: Fat Ham and the ‘Ghost in the [Hamlet] Machine’.- Chapter 4-""A Different Thing All Together"": Liminalities of Time in Fat Ham's American South.-Section Two: Preparation.-Chapter 5-Irreverent Reverence or Playing with Shakespeare: an Interview with Saheem Ali.-Chapter 6-""You See What Happened There?"": Soliloquies, Reality Confessionals and Queer Phenomenology in Fat Ham.-Chapter 7-An Open Book, Kind of: Open-Ended Stage Directions in James Ijames’ Fat Ham.-Chapter 8-This Queen is No Pawn: Tedra, An Autoethnographic Account.-Section Three: Embodied Actualization.-Chapter 9-Fat Ham: Choosing Pleasure Over Harm In Fat Positive Representation.-Chapter 10-Soft and Sticky: Fat Ham and the Tackiness of Queer Embodiment.-Chapter 11-“I want to bless somebody with how soft I can be”: Disidentifications with Softness in James Ijames’ Fat Ham.-Chapter 12-“I Wanted You to See Me in My Uniform”: Larry, Queerness, and Reflections of “Don't Ask, Don't Tell”in Fat Ham.-Section Four: Endings.-Chapter 13-The View of The Elders: An Interview.-Chapter 14-“We Tragic:” Tragic Individuals and Community in Fat Ham and Kill Move Paradise.-Chapter 15-Barbecue and the Bard: Southern Foodways and Traumatic Consumption in Fat Ham.-Chapter 15-They eat. They talk shit”: The Role of Barbecue in Fat Ham’s Queer Utopia.

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Author Information

Valerie Clayman Pye is an Associate Professor of Theatre and Chair of the Department of Theatre, Dance, and Arts Management at Long Island University, USA. Danielle Rosvally is an Assistant Professor of Theatre at the University at Buffalo, USA.

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