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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Theatrum Mundi and site in four television Shakespeare films
Victor Huertas Martínsubject
LiteratureHistoryMetatheatreMetalepsisLiterature and Literary Theorybusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectArtSite specificitybusinessCinematografia i literaturaHamlet (place)media_commondescription
This article explores metatheatricality and site specificity in four Shakespeare television films produced by Illuminations Media: Gregory Doran’s Macbeth (2001), Hamlet (2009) and Julius Caesar (2012), and Rupert Goold’s Macbeth (2010). Drawing on metatheatrical theory applied to the screen and recent criticism on site-specific theatre, I explore the films as self-referential and self-conscious works embedded in environments that oppose the artifice of drama to the ‘reality’ of normative television film. Shakespeare’s aesthetic metaphor, presented in self-contained theatrical worlds, does not depict autonomous fictions but is disrupted by outside ‘reality’.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-04-16 | Cahiers Élisabéthains: A Journal of English Renaissance Studies |