From the Editor

IF 0.5 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES
Jeremy Lopez
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

It is my great pleasure to introduce this special issue in honor of Gail Kern Paster, who provided field-shaping leadership of Shakespeare Quarterly and its home institution the Folger Shakespeare Library, and whose scholarly work has given us a powerful language and methodology for thinking about the relation between mind, body, and environment in the drama of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. I am grateful to Bruce R. Smith, Evelyn Tribble, Paul Yachnin, and Julian Yates for accepting my invitation to contribute to this issue and for producing a set of vivid, imaginative essays that demonstrate the range and depth of Gail’s influence. Most broadly, the aim of Gail’s work is (as she puts it near the beginning of Humoring the Body) “to look for traces of a historical phenomenology in the language of affect in early modern drama in order that readers of that drama and other texts of the period may begin to recover some of the historical particularity of early modern emotional self-experience.”1 It is a testament to the success of this project that, in reading a sentence like the one I have just quoted, we now barely register its staggering ambition. Gail’s scholarship has made the excavation of affect in a distant historical moment—the recovery of “lived practices of early modern cosmology” (20) and the assessment of Shakespeare’s “idiosyncratic understanding of contemporary psychophysiology” in relation to the “intellectual framework of his cultural moment” (23)—not only a locally productive form of cultural archaeology, but a pervasive, vital methodology for the interpretation of early modern literature in relation to our own historical moment and our own sense of ourselves. As Gail would be the first to point out, her scholarship has not accomplished this feat on its own; rather, it has flourished in sustained dialogue with a vast array of historians and theorists of the emotions, the body, and the theater who have inspired her and been inspired by her. At once skeptical and receptive in its approach to the texts it encounters, Gail’s work is consistently generative to those who encounter it. The dialogic quality of her scholarship, and its continuing ability to push early modern studies in new directions, is everywhere on display in this issue’s four essays: from Bruce Smith’s listening for the sound of early modern “complexion,” to Lyn Tribble’s description of the atmospherics of magic circles, to Paul Yachnin’s anatomy of bodily shame in the Sonnets, to Julian Yates’s discussion of the intersection between affect and apocalypse in King Lear and some of its distant descendants.
来自编辑
我非常荣幸地向盖尔·科恩·帕斯特(Gail Kern Paster)介绍这期特刊,她为《莎士比亚季刊》及其所属机构福尔杰·莎士比亚图书馆(Folger Shakespeare Library)提供了领域塑造方面的领导,她的学术工作为我们提供了一种强大的语言和方法,让我们可以思考莎士比亚及其同时代戏剧中思想、身体和环境之间的关系。我要感谢Bruce R. Smith、Evelyn Tribble、Paul Yachnin和Julian Yates接受我的邀请,为本期杂志撰稿,并撰写了一系列生动、富有想象力的文章,展示了盖尔影响的广度和深度。更广泛地说,盖尔作品的目的是(正如她在《幽默身体》的开头所说的那样)“在早期现代戏剧的情感语言中寻找历史现象学的痕迹,以便戏剧的读者和那个时期的其他文本可能开始恢复早期现代情感自我体验的一些历史特殊性。这是这个项目成功的证明,在阅读我刚才引用的句子时,我们现在几乎没有注意到它惊人的雄心。盖尔的学术研究挖掘了遥远历史时刻的情感——恢复“早期现代宇宙学的生活实践”(20),评估莎士比亚“对当代心理生理学的特殊理解”与“他的文化时刻的智力框架”(23)的关系——不仅是文化考古学的一种局部生产形式,而且是一种普遍存在的,这是解释早期现代文学与我们自己的历史时刻和自我意识的重要方法论。正如盖尔首先指出的那样,她的学识并没有独自完成这一壮举;相反,它在与一大批情感、身体和戏剧的历史学家和理论家的持续对话中蓬勃发展,这些人给了她灵感,也受到了她的启发。盖尔的作品对遇到的文本既持怀疑态度,又乐于接受,对遇到它的人来说,她的作品始终具有创造性。她的学术研究的对话品质,以及持续推动早期现代研究向新方向发展的能力,在本期的四篇文章中随处可见:从布鲁斯·史密斯(Bruce Smith)倾听早期现代“肤色”的声音,到林恩·特里布尔(Lyn Tribble)对魔法圈氛围的描述,到保罗·亚契宁(Paul Yachnin)在十四行诗中对身体羞耻的剖析,再到朱利安·耶茨(Julian Yates)在《李尔王》(King Lear)及其一些遥远的后代中对情感与天启之间的交叉的讨论。
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来源期刊
SHAKESPEARE QUARTERLY
SHAKESPEARE QUARTERLY Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Founded in 1950 by the Shakespeare Association of America, Shakespeare Quarterly is a refereed journal committed to publishing articles in the vanguard of Shakespeare studies. The Quarterly, produced by Folger Shakespeare Library in association with George Washington University, features notes that bring to light new information on Shakespeare and his age, issue and exchange sections for the latest ideas and controversies, theater reviews of significant Shakespeare productions, and book reviews to keep its readers current with Shakespeare criticism and scholarship.
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