Global Performance and Local Reception: Teaching Hamlet and More in Singapore

E. Jones
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

When Emily Griffiths Jones taught a Shakespeare seminar in Singapore through MIT’s Global Shakespeares project, she found. In this context, normative Western patterns of interpretation are challenged, along with their assumptions of a “supposedly universalizing psychological realm.” The comparative deployment of digitally archived multicultural performances led students to engage with Shakespeare’s works in a way that “transcend[s] the myth of monolithic textual authority.” Through interpreting, comparing, and responding creatively to global Shakespeares (including making their own short films), students used Shakespearean performance to address social issues relevant to them, from immigration to LGBTQ rights.
全球演出与本地接待:在新加坡教授《哈姆雷特》等
当艾米丽·格里菲斯·琼斯通过麻省理工学院的全球莎士比亚项目在新加坡教授莎士比亚研讨会时,她发现。在这种背景下,西方规范的解释模式受到了挑战,以及他们对“所谓的普遍心理领域”的假设。数字存档的多元文化表演的比较部署使学生以一种“超越单一文本权威的神话”的方式参与莎士比亚的作品。通过解读、比较和创造性地回应全球莎士比亚(包括制作自己的短片),学生们用莎士比亚的表演来解决与他们相关的社会问题,从移民到LGBTQ权利。
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