
Contents
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Introduction: Integrating Shakespeare and Folk Introduction: Integrating Shakespeare and Folk
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When Harley Met Cecil: Shakespeare, Folk, and ‘Deep England’ When Harley Met Cecil: Shakespeare, Folk, and ‘Deep England’
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All in It Together, As We Like It?: Alternate Takes on Folk and the Golden Age All in It Together, As We Like It?: Alternate Takes on Folk and the Golden Age
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Be Glad for the Song Has No Ending Be Glad for the Song Has No Ending
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Bibliography Bibliography
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30 Shakespeare in Czechoslovakia: The Comedy of Errors, Hamlet, and Coriolanus on the Operatic Stage
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7 Shakespeare and Folk
Get accessAdam Hansen is Senior Lecturer in English at Northumbria University. He is the author of Shakespeare and Popular Music (2010), and co-editor of Litpop: Writing and Popular Music (2014), and Shakespearean Echoes (2015), in which he published a chapter on Shakespeare and disco. His essay ‘The Politics of Popular Music in Contemporary Shakespearean Performance’ was published in Bill Barclay’s and David Lindley’s Shakespeare, Music and Performance (2017).
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Published:14 February 2022
Cite
Abstract
English folk has long been critical of and opposed to the political and cultural status quo, yet also rooted, atavistic, despairing, and utopian in equal measure. These characteristics combine to create a form of culture both integral and eccentric to understandings of ‘English’ national identity. So what happens when folk’s musics, histories, and meanings encounter or engage with another potent, iconic, and equally vexed and complex signifier of ‘Englishness’: Shakespeare? What assumptions and expectations come into play—about Shakespeare and about ‘folk’—when the two are combined? If Shakespeare used, and moved back and forth between, ‘high’ and ‘popular’ culture at various points in his career (and in his afterlives), might he now be considered part of ‘folk’ culture? This chapter tries to answer these questions by exploring how a range of these engagements have happened, focusing on and comparing two in detail: Harley Granville-Barker’s 1914 production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, with music by Cecil Sharp, and Maria Aberg’s 2013 staging of As You like It, featuring music from the ‘neo-folk’ artist Laura Marling. Discussion broadens beyond Shakespeare in performance to consider what conflicts and contradictions about Shakespeare, ‘Englishness’, and ‘folk’ are suppressed or realized through aligning Shakespeare with a ‘folk’ aesthetic.
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