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SHAKESPEARE (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   146860


In Memoriam: Yehuda Avner, our Shakespeare / Leibler, Isi   Journal Article
Leibler, Isi Journal Article
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Contents As we commemorate a year since Yehuda Avner passed away at the age of 86, we honor a noble Israeli who devoted his entire life to serving the Jewish state and the Jewish people. He was my dearest friend with whom I was in almost daily contact over the past decade.
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2
ID:   138437


Labours lost and won: Shakespeare and the great war / Godwin, Ashlee   Article
Godwin, Ashlee Article
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Summary/Abstract Among the myriad cultural activities that took place across the UK in 2014 to mark the entenary of the outbreak of the First World War, it would have been surprising had Shakespeare been omitted, such is the unrelenting popularity of the ‘national bard’.
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3
ID:   163841


Shakespeare in the Arab Jordanian Consciousness: Shylock in the Poetry of ʿArār (Mustafa Wahbi Al-Tal) / Alhawamdeh, Hussein A   Journal Article
Alhawamdeh, Hussein A Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice has been reimagined, adapted, and appropriated by Arab playwrights and poets. The Arab Jordanian poet ʿArār (Mustafa Wahbi Al-Tal; 1897–1949) appropriates Shakespeare's anti-archetype of the figure of the Jew, Shylock, to criticize two local issues in the early twentieth-century context in Jordan and Palestine. First, the phenomenon of money-lending by Jordanian merchants, which led to the confiscation of the poor peasants' lands in the early twentieth century. Second, the condemnation of Zionism and its association with Western colonialism. Shakespeare's Shylock, on one hand, is recreated as a Jordanian Shylock, who is a usurer, and, on the other, as a Zionist Shylock. This remoulding of Shakespeare's Shylock as an Arab and Zionist reveals the post-Shakespeare Arab audience's new perception of The Merchant of Venice as a play about the political and behavioral affiliations of Shylock rather than about his Jewish ethnicity.
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