In:Shakespeare and Crisis: One hundred years of Italian narratives
Edited by Silvia Bigliazzi
[Shakespeare in European Culture 2] 2020
► pp. 215–243
Chapter 6Notes on Shakespeare, simulacra, and the aporias of ‘acting’
Published online: 22 June 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sec.2.06big
https://doi.org/10.1075/sec.2.06big
Abstract
The essay explores selected examples of theatrical and philosophical Italian responses to Shakespeare in relation
to a diffused sense of crisis of representation, entailing a crisis of the subject, from the early 1980s to 2016. It investigates how
after about more than three decades that sense of crisis is still present with us, and the different forms it has taken: from the
inception of the ‘culture of simulacra’, to its magnification in the Berlusconi age, and to a belated postmodern awareness of a crisis
extending globewise to entropy point. It discusses different uses of Shakespeare, contrasting strategies of intermedial appropriation
as critiques of a culture of simulacra with allegorical forms of ‘hyperreal’ adaptations that by recuperating ideas of ‘transparent
representation’ sidestep preoccupations about the hyperreal. Central to the discussion is a reading of Massimo Cacciari’s
interpretation of Hamlet as the inaugural point of the ‘crisis of modernity’ viewed as a
longue-durée historical category.
Article outline
- Questions of reality
- Mimesis vs simulacra
- “I must do something… I must put on a show”
- Aporias of ‘acting’: A quick glance at ‘intermedial Caesar’
- Back to the future: 2016 Technicolour mainstream
- Coda
Notes References
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