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Shakespeare and Ireland
‘Hitherto she ne’re could fancy him’: Shakespeare’s ‘British’ Plays and the Exclusion of Ireland
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Author(s):
Andrew Hadfield
Publication date
(Print):
1997
Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan UK
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Mastering the Revels
Richard E. Dutton
(1991)
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The Location of Culture
HK Bhabha
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H. Bhabha
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Homi Bhabha
…
(1994)
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Tudor Ireland: Crown, Community and the Conflict of Cultures, 1470–1603
SG Ellis
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S Ellis
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Steven G. Ellis
(1985)
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Publication date (Print):
1997
Pages
: 47-67
DOI:
10.1007/978-1-349-25924-3_4
SO-VID:
3496e2cd-7b52-4dc1-95b5-59b73ce3d870
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Book chapters
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 9
Neighbourhood in Henry V
pp. 27
Shakespeare, Holinshed and Ireland: Resources and Con-texts
pp. 47
‘Hitherto she ne’re could fancy him’: Shakespeare’s ‘British’ Plays and the Exclusion of Ireland
pp. 68
Where is Ireland in The Tempest?
pp. 91
‘Shakespeare Explained’: James Joyce’s Shakespeare from Victorian Burlesque to Postmodern Bard
pp. 114
W. B. Yeats and Shakespearean Character
pp. 136
Shakespeare and the Definition of the Irish Nation
pp. 152
Bridegrooms to the Goddess: Hughes, Heaney and the Elizabethans
pp. 175
No ‘Brave Irishman’ Need Apply: Thomas Sheridan, Shakespeare and the Smock-Alley Theatre
pp. 193
Rug-headed kerns speaking tongues: Shakespeare, Translation and the Irish Language
pp. 213
‘Tish ill done’: Henry the Fift and the Politics of Editing
pp. 235
Shakespeare and the Sectarian Divide: Politics and Pedagogy in (post) Post-ceasefire Belfast
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