CFP: Shakespeare and the Jews: A Global Exploration
20th March 2020
In 1992, James Shapiro discussed ‘Shakespeare and the Jews’ in the James Parkes Lecture at the University of Southampton, a lecture that would form one of the cornerstones of his ground-breaking book of the same title. Thirty years later, in 2022, the journal Shakespeare pays homage to his research, both by looking back and reflecting on the issues Shapiro raised, and by looking around us in today’s world where the topic is as relevant as ever. Shakespeare and the accusation of anti-Semitism have long been intertwined, with The Merchant of Venice being central in this discourse. Today, the evidence of rising anti-Semitism has become almost impossible to ignore. There is a growing sense of urgency, as an increase in incidents is reported across the world, while in Europe, the continent most directly confronted with the horrors of the Shoah, anti-Semitism is no longer an issue confined to extremist parties but seems to have entered the political and cultural mainstream.
This special issue of Shakespeare invites submissions that analyse the topic ‘Shakespeare and the Jews’ in local and/or global contexts and a wide spectrum of thematic, methodological and disciplinary approaches. We are interested in representing a broad geographical range, and invite essays from both academics and practitioners in Asia, Africa, Australia, Europe, and the Americas. While the topic is of obvious interest to Shakespeare scholars, we also encourage essays from other disciplines (or inter- and transdisciplinary essays), including Theatre Studies, Film Studies, Philosophy, Political and Historical Science, Ethics, Judaism, Middle Eastern Studies, Religious Studies and Anthropology.
Possible areas of interest include:
- Dressing Jews: costuming in contemporary productions
- Depicting Jews: representations in movie/performance posters, book covers or program notes
- The ghetto in Shakespeare’s text and/or Shakespearean productions
- Shakespeare, Jews and performance in the local (national or regional) context
- Shakespeare and the Jews in amateur productions
- Shakespeare, Jews and (de)constructing stereotypes
- Shakespeare and the Jews in a multicultural society
- Shakespeare, Jews and acting: movement and gestures on stage
- Shakespeare’s Jews and religious encounters: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
- Shakespeare and anti-Semitism on/off stage: local, national or transnational perspectives
- Shakespeare and the Jews: a political perspective
- Shakespeare, Jews and propaganda
- Shakespeare, Jews and props on stage
- Jewish themes in Shakespeare’s plays
- Representing Jews in Shakespeare translations
- The reception and/or adaptation of Shakespeare in Jewish communities across the world
- The reception and/or adaptation of Shakespeare’s Jews in Israel and neighbouring countries
- Jewish directors/actors responding to Shakespeare
- A view from the classroom: on teaching Shakespeare and the Jews
- A view at the screen: Shakespeare and Jews in films and on tv
- Audience responses to Shakespeare’s Jews
- Shaming Shakespeare: bans and censorship
- The Merchant of Venice and the conflict in the Middle East
- Shakespeare, Jews and pogroms
- Affecting change through Shakespeare’s Jews
- Money(lending) and anti-Semitic myths
- Shakespeare, ethics and Jews
- Shakespeare’s Jews, Gender and Sexuality
- The impact of modern appropriations and adaptations of The Merchant of Venice
Guest editors: Coen Heijes (University of Groningen) & Sabine Schülting (Freie Universität Berlin)
Afterword: James Shapiro
Lengths of submissions: 6,000 – 7,000 words
Deadline for abstracts: April 15, 2020
Deadline for submissions: January 15, 2021
For further information, please contact c.p.a.heijes@rug.nl or sabine.schuelting@fu-berlin.de