Shakespeare and the Performance of Girlhood

Author:   Deanne Williams (York University, Toronto)
Publisher:   Palgrave MacMillan
ISBN:  

9781306734851


Pages:   290
Publication Date:   01 January 2014
Format:   Electronic book text
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Shakespeare and the Performance of Girlhood


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Author:   Deanne Williams (York University, Toronto)
Publisher:   Palgrave MacMillan
Imprint:   Palgrave MacMillan
ISBN:  

9781306734851


ISBN 10:   1306734851
Pages:   290
Publication Date:   01 January 2014
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Electronic book text
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Deanne Williams ventures into largely unexplored territory in this fascinating and important study of girlhood and its implications in Shakespeare. The book is challenging, well argued and continuously interesting, and reveals something genuinely new about Shakespeare. - Stephen Orgel, J. E. Reynolds Professor in the Humanities, Stanford University, USA With great lucidity and authority, yet a nicely light touch, Williams draws together an immense amount of research into the cultural history of pre-modern girlhood to frame original and insightful arguments, which are developed with impressive clarity. This outstanding book gave me a fresh perspective on ways of reading Shakespeare's girls and a new appreciation of some familiar works. - Kate Chedgzoy, Newcastle University, UK Deanne Williams provides the first sustained account of girlhood in Shakespeare's plays, one that is performative rather than essentialist. Girl characters performed by boy actors, performances by girls in masques and other private theatricals, and girls as writers and performers inspired by Shakespeare's girls, are surveyed to show compellingly how girlhood emerged as a significant formation in the early modern period. From la Pucelle to the birth of baby Elizabeth at the close of Henry VIII, from Macbeth, who describes himself as a baby of a girl, to the thirteen-year-old masque writer Lady Rachel Fane, Williams excavates a history that has long been ignored but has come into its own. - Karen Newman, Brown University, USA Williams radically reframes common notions of girlhood as a marginal, interstitial state, interpreting it rather as the cultural site of creative and potentially radical possibilities. Moving from girls as characters in the Shakespeare canon to historical girls empowered by Shakespeare to perform and create roles for girls, Williams reveals how those roles can be innovative and liberating. Anyone interested in gender, in Shakespear


Author Information

Deanne Williams is Associate Professor of English at York University in Toronto, Canada. Her previous books include The French Fetish from Chaucer to Shakespeare (2004), Postcolonial Approaches to the European Middle Ages: Translating Cultures, edited with Ananya Jahanara Kabir (2005), and The Afterlife of Ophelia, edited with Kaara Peterson (2012).

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