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Universals in the bush
the case of hamlet
pp. 143-162
Résumé
In this essay, Dominique Brancher takes her cue from Laura Bohannan's classic article, "Shakespeare in the Bush" (Natural History 75:28–33, 1966), which describes Bohannan's attempt to prove the existence of human universals by confronting the Tiv people with Shakespeare's play. Even if the need, and the ability, to produce narrative, poetry and folklore is seen as universal, Brancher asks whether there can be such things as universal literary works, and how they come to appear universal. She argues that none of the wide range of approaches she examines can satisfactorily explain Hamlet's seeming universality. If anything, the universal appeal lies in what Stephen Greenblatt calls "theatrical mobility": the cultural spaces that are opened up by the story's, and the eponymous character's migrations.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Habermann Ina, Witen Michelle (2016) Shakespeare and space: theatrical explorations of the spatial paradigm. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 143-162
DOI: 10.1057/978-1-137-51835-4_8
Citation complète:
Brancher Dominique, 2016, Universals in the bush: the case of hamlet. In I. Habermann & M. Witen (eds.) Shakespeare and space (143-162). Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.