Contents: Kathryn Prince: «True Originall Copies»: Charlotte Lennox’s Shakespear Illustrated, Originality, Invention, and Eighteenth-Century Shakespeare Reception – Catherine M.S. Alexander: Shakespeare and the Unsexed Females – Anna Cetera: Woman, Thy Name is Embarrassment! The Princess and the Playwright – Nita N. Kumar: «Shakespeare Is a Black Woman»: African American Women Writers and Shakespeare – Giovanna Buonanno: Shakespeare and the Nineteenth-century Italian International Actress: Adelaide Ristori as Lady Macbeth – Krystyna Kujawińska Courtney: «Born outside the Magic Pale of the Anglo-Saxon Race»: Political and Personal Dimension of Helena Modjeska’s Contribution to Shakespeare Studies – Yoshiko Kawachi: Madame Sadayakko: The First Shakespearean Actress in Japan - On Her Contribution toward Modernizing the Stage – Rosemary Gaby: Taking Shakespeare to the Edge of the World: Leading Ladies on Tour in Colonial Australia – Deb Narayan Bandyopadhyay: «Women of Ill-fame» and Shakespeare Performance in Colonial Bengal – Laurence Wright: «Most Fearful Hard Work»: Gwen Ffrangcon-Davies, Marda Vanne and the «Good Companions» in South Africa – Donna Woodford-Gormley: The Woman behind the Mask: Cuban Women and Shakespeare – Anna Kamaralli: Revisionism or Fresh Vision? Silence, Speech and the Female Director – Xenia Georgopoulou: Shakespeare’s Magic Mirror: The Work of Raia Mouzenidou – Julie Sutherland: «Never Conquered nor Possessed»: Shakespeare in Native Canada and Québec in the Late Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Centuries – Margarida Gandara Rauen: On Shakespeare by Brazilian Women.
Krystyna Kujawińska-Courtney is Associate Professor at the
University of Lodz (Poland). Her research interests are literary
theory, especially gender and New Historicist studies. She has
published on the global cultural authority of Shakespeare’s plays
in relation to theatre and early modern and modern culture.
Izabella Penier has a PhD in American literature. She works on
African American and Caribbean literature, ethnic and postcolonial
scholarship, mainly on critical interventions into Black studies
from global frameworks of analysis such as postcolonialism,
cultural and diaspora studies.
Katarzyna Kwapisz-Williams has a PhD in English studies. Her
research interests include literary theory and digital humanities,
utopian literature, diasporic literature, and Renaissance studies.
She also works on migrant narratives and cultural memory and
imaginaries.
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