In:Shakespeare and Crisis: One hundred years of Italian narratives
Edited by Silvia Bigliazzi
[Shakespeare in European Culture 2] 2020
► pp. 245–275
Chapter 7Narrating and unravelling Italian crises through Shakespeare (2000–2016)
Published online: 22 June 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sec.2.07mon
https://doi.org/10.1075/sec.2.07mon
Abstract
Contemporary Italian theatre has witnessed a wide range of Shakespearean productions, whose significance with
respect to the theme of crisis has been twofold. On the one hand, Shakespeare has been employed in Italy to face the radical reduction
in economic support suffered by theatre professionals, who have then relied on the marketability of the Bard’s ‘brand’ for funding and
to draw audiences to the theatre. On the other hand, Shakespeare’s plays have proved functional to unravelling cultural, social and
political problems in Italy. Accordingly, this chapter investigates the function of Shakespeare both as a marketing strategy and as an
intellectual tool to tackle the different crises which have traversed Italy since the beginning of the new millennium.
Article outline
- Introduction
- Shakespeare and the economic and cultural crises of Italian theatre
- Italian Shakespeare(s) against the economic crisis
- “The only Shake-scene in a country”: Italian Shakespeare(s) against the cultural crisis
- Shakespeare as an intellectual tool: Narrating Italian socio-political crises
- ‘Narrating’ the Italian socio-political crises through Shakespeare: Carmelo Rifici’s Julius Caesar and The Tempest by Motus Theatre Company
- Conclusion
Notes References Websites (accessed July 27, 2019)
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