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Shakespeare and Accentism

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This collection explores the consequences of accentism - an under-researched issue that intersects with racism and classism - in the Shakespeare industry across languages and cultures, past and present. It adopts a transmedia and transhistorical approach to a subject that has been dominated by the study of Original Pronunciation. Yet the OP project avoids linguistically foreign characters such as Othello because of the additional complications their aberrant speech poses to the reconstruction process. It also evades discussion of contemporary, global practices and, underpinning the enterprise, is the search for an aural purity that arguably never existed. By contrast, this collection attends to foreign speech patterns in both the early modern and postmodern periods, including Indian, East Asian and South African, and explores how accents operate as metasigns reinforcing ethno-racial stereotypes and social hierarchies. It embraces new methodologies, which includes reorienting attention away from the visual and onto the aural dimensions of performance.

240 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 31, 2021

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About the author

Adele Lee

13 books

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