Synopses & Reviews
Teaching Shakespeare Beyond the Centre showcases a wide array of recent, innovative and original research into Shakespeare and learning in Australasia, in secondary, tertiary and adult education. Premised on the dissolution of the centre/colony binary that for so long structured the reception and teaching of Shakespeare in the colonies, the book explores the use of local knowledge and experience to invigorate and renew learning. In elevating the value of the 'local', the book provides models of educational theory and practice that are transferable and adaptable. The editors have drawn on contributors with diverse areas of expertise including dramatic practitioners, historicist scholars, school teachers and academics who train teachers, and literary scholars with an interest in new theoretical and practical approaches to pedagogy.
Synopsis
Showcasing a wide array of recent, innovative and original research into Shakespeare and learning in Australasia and beyond, this volume argues the value of the 'local' and provides transferable and adaptable models of educational theory and practice.
Synopsis
Teaching Shakespeare Beyond the Centre showcases a wide array of recent, innovative and original research into Shakespeare and learning in Australasia, in secondary, tertiary and adult education. Premised on the dissolution of the centre/colony binary that for so long structured the reception and teaching of Shakespeare in the colonies, the book explores the use of local knowledge and experience to invigorate and renew learning. In elevating the value of the 'local', the book provides models of educational theory and practice that are transferable and adaptable. The editors have drawn on contributors with diverse areas of expertise including dramatic practitioners, historicist scholars, school teachers and academics who train teachers, and literary scholars with an interest in new theoretical and practical approaches to pedagogy.
About the Author
PENNY GAY is Emeritus Professor in English and Drama at the University of Sydney, Australia, where she taught for 35 years. Her books include As She Likes It: Shakespeare's Unruly Women, Jane Austen and the Theatre, and The Cambridge Introduction to Shakespeare's Comedies.
L E SEMLER is an associate professor of Early Modern Literature, University of Sydney, Australia, and president of the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association. He is author of The English Mannerist Poets and the Visual Arts and editor of Eliza's Babes or The Virgins Offering (1652). He has co-edited (with P. Kelly) Word and Self Estranged in English Texts 1550-1660 and (with B. Hodge and P. Kelly) What is the Human? Australian Voices from the Humanities.
KATE FLAHERTY is a lecturer in English and Drama at the Australian National University. Her research treats Shakespeare in performance, Shakespeare in Australia, and Shakespeare in education. From 2008-2011 she held a postdoctoral research fellowship at the University of Sydney. Her book, Ours as We Play it: Australia plays Shakespeare, was published in 2011.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Learning Locally; K.Flaherty, P.Gay and L.E. Semler
PART I: SHAKESPEARE AND THE COLONIAL STUDENT
From Domestic Didacticism to Compulsory Examination: School Shakespeare from 1850 to the present; L.Brady
'The Bogey of the Schoolroom': Shakespeare, 'Royal Readers' and New Zealand writers; M.Murray-Pepper
Supposing a Blackboard to be a Bear: Touring Shakespeare to Australian teenagers; D.Martin
PART II: NEW PARADIGMS
Admitting to Adaptation in the Shakespeare Classroom; J.Clement
Unthinking Hamlet: Stage, Page and Critical Thought; L.Johnson
Habitation and Naming: Teaching local Shakespeares; K.Flaherty
The Lecture as Theatre: Learning the Boundaries of Scepticism in The Winter's Tale; H.Griffiths
Emergence in Ardenspace: Shakespeare Pedagogy, As You Like It, and Modus Iferandi; L.E.Semler
PART III: MEETING TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY STUDENTS
Teaching Shakespeare through Familial Identity: Exploring the Centrality of Home in Romeo and Juliet; G.Brock
'Let me be that I am': The Rhetoric of the Teenage Self and Shakespeare in Performance; S.Golsby-Smith
Operation Shakespeare: Titus in Ten Days; D.Denley
A Shakespeare Brief Immersion Method for Undergraduates; P.Gay
Teaching with Cue Scripts: Making the Most of Fear in the Student Actor; A.Kamaralli
'We know what we are, but not what we may be': Teaching Shakespeare to Future Teachers; M-R.McLaren
Using Sinicised Adaptations for Shakespeare Pedagogy in Taiwan: The Banquet and Bond; C.Chun-pai Hsieh
Shakespeare Synecdoche: Or, How to teach music through literature (and vice-versa); C.Griffiths
Shakespeare of the Oppressed; R.Pensalfini
Afterword; M.Neill
Index