In:Shakespeare and Crisis: One hundred years of Italian narratives
Edited by Silvia Bigliazzi
[Shakespeare in European Culture 2] 2020
► pp. 175–211
Chapter 5Allegorising and minoritising Richard III
Published online: 22 June 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sec.2.05big
https://doi.org/10.1075/sec.2.05big
Abstract
Against the backdrop of widespread topical readings of Richard III as post-war allegories of
totalitarianisms ‘reconciling’ us with painful memories of trauma and monstrosity, this chapter discusses Carmelo Bene’s experiment in
minoritisation as a form of political disengagement but also political challenge. It reappraises Bene’s dialogue with Deleuze by
situating his 1977 anti-theatrical experiment with Shakespeare’s play within the context of contemporary forms of theatrical
contestation and, contrariwise, connivance with political power in the 1970s. Finally, it investigates Bene’s experimental
minoritisation of Shakespeare’s history play by contrasting a subversive conception of history with official history, and to this end
exploiting the dynamic resources of the eventfulness of the performance. It also assesses Bene’s own claimed anarchic way of
transcending power games by examining his interpretation of ‘essential minority’ as opposed to ‘actual minority’ in relation to a
notion of immanent politics that refuses transcendental justifications.
Keywords: Shakespeare’s Richard III, Carmelo Bene, Deleuze, minority theatre
Article outline
- ‘Liberties’ and ‘travesties’
- Allegorising Richard
- Paradoxes of anarchic minoritisations
- Undoing Richard: Bene against history
- The unsaid
- Intertextual assemblages
- Deallegorising Richard
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