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Items
Details
Title
Emily Dickinson's Shakespeare / Páraic Finnerty.
Created/published
Amherst : University of Massachusetts Press, ©2006.
Description
viii, 267 p. ; 24 cm
Associated name
Bibliography, etc.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 209-259) and index.
Contents
There's nothing wicked in Shakespeare, and if there is I don't want to know it" / Advising women readers, Amherst's Shakespeare's Club, and Richard Henry Dana Sr.
"I read a few words since I came home - John Talbot's parting with his son, and Margaret's with Suffolk" / Reading and performing Shakespeare, Fanny Kemble, and the Astor Place riot
"Shakespeare was never accused of writing Bacon's Works" / American Shakespeare criticism, Delia Bacon, James Russell Lowell, and Richard Grant White
"He has had his future who has found Shakespeare" / American Nationalism and the English Dramatist
"Pity me, however, I have finished Ramon. Would that like Shakespeare, it were just published!" / Shakespeare and women writers
"Shakespeare always and forever" / Dickinson's circulation of the bard
"Then I settled down to a willingness for all the rest to go but William Shakespeare. Why need we Joseph read anything else but him" / Dickinson reading Antony and Cleopatra
"Heard Othello at Museum" / Junius Brutus Booth, Tommaso Salvini, and the performance of race
"Hamlet wavered for all of us" / Dickinson and Shakespearean tragedy
Conclusion: "Touch Shakespeare for me."
"I read a few words since I came home - John Talbot's parting with his son, and Margaret's with Suffolk" / Reading and performing Shakespeare, Fanny Kemble, and the Astor Place riot
"Shakespeare was never accused of writing Bacon's Works" / American Shakespeare criticism, Delia Bacon, James Russell Lowell, and Richard Grant White
"He has had his future who has found Shakespeare" / American Nationalism and the English Dramatist
"Pity me, however, I have finished Ramon. Would that like Shakespeare, it were just published!" / Shakespeare and women writers
"Shakespeare always and forever" / Dickinson's circulation of the bard
"Then I settled down to a willingness for all the rest to go but William Shakespeare. Why need we Joseph read anything else but him" / Dickinson reading Antony and Cleopatra
"Heard Othello at Museum" / Junius Brutus Booth, Tommaso Salvini, and the performance of race
"Hamlet wavered for all of us" / Dickinson and Shakespearean tragedy
Conclusion: "Touch Shakespeare for me."
Place of creation/publication
United States -- Massachusetts.
Item Details
Call number
PS1541.Z5 F56 2006