4 research outputs found

    Shakespeare in Middletown :1890-1899

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    Throughout the last few decades of the nineteenth century, America experienced a cultural shift in which Shakespeare moved from an integral part of common culture to a more refined position in the cultural hierarchy. By researching evidence from Muncie, Indiana during the 1890s, Shakespeare's presence and impact on the average American city can be examined and evaluated in comparison to previous scholarly research on Shakespeare’s cultural upward mobility. Shakespeare in advertisements, public lectures and studies, social clubs, public education, and performance notices from the local newspapers are analyzed, as are the Shakespearean texts borrowed from the Muncie Public Library according to the "What Middletown Read" database in order to come to a general conclusion about Shakespeare in Middletown at the turn of the twentieth century.Thesis (B.?)Honors Colleg

    American/Latin American Shakespeare

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    Panel chair: William Rampone, South Carolina State University Tara Olivero, Ball State University, “Shakespeare and the Nineteenth Century American Middletown” Jason Demeter, Marymount University, “‘That is Why He is Called a Poet’: James Baldwin’s Shakespeare” Maria-Josee Mendez, University of Southern California, “Shakespeare in La Mancha and Las Pampas: An Analysis of Shakespearean Influence on Spanish Language Texts
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