![The People's Bard: How China Made Shakespeare its Own: Penguin Specials](http://classicbargains.com.au/cdn/shop/products/9780734399021_{width}x.jpg?v=1652228851)
The People's Bard: How China Made Shakespeare its Own: Penguin Specials
Author: Pellegrini, Nancy
ISBN: 9780734399021
Publisher: Penguin
Year First Published: 2016
Pages: 142
Dimensions: 179mm x 114mm x 10mm
Format: Paperback / softback
Description
The story of Shakespeare in China is one of cultural blending and reinvention. Peopled by devoted evangelists, theatre directors and dogged interpreters intent on bridging divisions of language and politics, it tracks the trajectory of modern Chinese history and the development of theatre arts
The story of Shakespeare in China is one of cultural blending and reinvention. Peopled by devoted evangelists, theatre directors and dogged interpreters intent on bridging divisions of language and politics, it tracks the trajectory of modern Chinese history and the development of theatre arts. Four hundred years after Shakespeare's death, Nancy Pellegrini pulls back the curtain on how the Bard of Avon rose from inauspicious Chinese beginnings to become the People's Bard, exploring traditional opera-style Shakespeare productions, decades of Marxist interpretations, revolutionary translation methods and more.
ISBN: 9780734399021
Publisher: Penguin
Year First Published: 2016
Pages: 142
Dimensions: 179mm x 114mm x 10mm
Format: Paperback / softback
Description
The story of Shakespeare in China is one of cultural blending and reinvention. Peopled by devoted evangelists, theatre directors and dogged interpreters intent on bridging divisions of language and politics, it tracks the trajectory of modern Chinese history and the development of theatre arts
The story of Shakespeare in China is one of cultural blending and reinvention. Peopled by devoted evangelists, theatre directors and dogged interpreters intent on bridging divisions of language and politics, it tracks the trajectory of modern Chinese history and the development of theatre arts. Four hundred years after Shakespeare's death, Nancy Pellegrini pulls back the curtain on how the Bard of Avon rose from inauspicious Chinese beginnings to become the People's Bard, exploring traditional opera-style Shakespeare productions, decades of Marxist interpretations, revolutionary translation methods and more.