Phyllis Rackin Lecture -- Time, Tragedy, and the Text of Antony and Cleopatra with Rebecca Bushnell

Wednesday, December 4, 2013 - 1:30pm

Join us for Time, Tragedy, and the Text of Antony and Cleopatra with Rebecca Bushnell (School of Arts and Sciences Board of Overseers Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania) in Van Pelt Library, 6th Floor Pavilion

This lecture is part of a project on time in tragedy, where I am asking how the materiality of dramatic media can shape or disrupt our temporal experience of a play. I will explore the temporality of Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra, as its story, performance and text enact a struggle for mastery of historical and experiential time. In particular, I will focus on how editors from Rowe to Rasmussen have engaged in that same struggle, attempting to control the play’s “infinite variety.” 


Rebecca Bushnell writes and teaches about the genre of tragedy and early modern English culture. Her books include Prophesying Tragedy: Sign and Voice in Sophocles' Theban Plays; Tragedies of Tyrants: Political Thought & Theater in The English Renaissance; A Culture of Teaching: Early Modern Humanism in Theory and Practice; and Green Desire, a study of early modern English gardening books. Her Companion to Tragedy was published by Blackwell in 2005 and her  Tragedy: A Short Introduction, was published by Blackwell in 2007. She has received an ACLS research fellowship and the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching, as well as an NEH grant for Teaching with Technology. Professor Bushnell served as Associate Dean for the Humanities in the School of Arts and Sciences from 1998-2003, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences from 2003-2004, and Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences from 2005-2013.  She is currently the Vice President of the Shakespeare Association of America and will serve as President of the SAA begininng in 2014. She is also a member of the Board of Trustees of the Library Company of Philadelphia and Princeton Day School, and a member of the Advisory Board of Overseers of the Morris Arboretum.


The lecture will be followed by a reception

 

This year's Lecture is made possible through the generous support and sponsorship of the English Department, the Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies Program, and the Medieval-Renaissance Seminar. 

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