Shakespeare’s Props

Regular price €55.99
4e Cognition
A01=Sophie Duncan
Act III
Alan's Wife
Alan’s Wife
audience cognition
Author_Sophie Duncan
Black Handkerchief
Brazen Head
Category=DSBD
Category=DSG
cognitive approaches to Shakespearean objects
Dead Men
Early Modern
early modern drama
Early Modern Playwrights
Early Modern Stage
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Face Reading
Facial Emotion Perception
Friar Bacon
Hamlet
Ian Barber
Lady's Tragedy
Lady’s Tragedy
Macbeth
material culture studies
Miniature Portraits
Mrs Tanqueray
Othello
Othello's Mother
Othello’s Mother
Otto's Notebook
Otto’s Notebook
Recent Identity
Recollection
Renaissance
Renaissance memory theory
Richard III
Sensorimotor Contingencies
Shakespeare's Richard II
Shakespeare’s Richard II
stage property analysis
theatrical affect transmission
Trivial Fond Records
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367662189
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Cognitive approaches to drama have enriched our understanding of Early Modern playtexts, acting and spectatorship. This monograph is the first full-length study of Shakespeare’s props and their cognitive impact. Shakespeare’s most iconic props have become transhistorical, transnational metonyms for their plays: a strawberry-spotted handkerchief instantly recalls Othello; a skull Hamlet. One reason for stage properties’ neglect by cognitive theorists may be the longstanding tendency to conceptualise props as detachable body parts: instead, this monograph argues for props as detachable parts of the mind. Through props, Shakespeare’s characters offload, reveal and intervene in each other’s cognition, illuminating and extending their affect. Shakespeare’s props are neither static icons nor substitutes for the body, but volatile, malleable, and dangerously exposed extensions of his characters’ minds. Recognising them as such offers new readings of the plays, from the way memory becomes a weapon in Hamlet’s Elsinore, to the pleasures and perils of Early Modern gift culture in Othello. The monograph illuminates Shakespeare’s exploration of extended cognition, recollection and remembrance at a time when the growth of printing was forcing Renaissance culture to rethink the relationship between memory and the object. Readings in Shakespearean stage history reveal how props both carry audience affect and reveal cultural priorities: some accrue cultural memories, while others decay and are forgotten as detritus of the stage.

Dr. Sophie Duncan is a Fellow in English at Christ Church College, University of Oxford.