FT-50021-03 | Research Programs: Summer Stipends | Coppelia H. Kahn | Shakespeare and National Identity in England, the U.S., and the Canada | 6/1/2003 - 7/31/2003 | $5,000.00 | Coppelia | H. | Kahn | | | | Brown University | Providence | RI | 02912-9100 | USA | 2003 | Western Civilization | Summer Stipends | Research Programs | 5000 | 0 | 5000 | 0 |
This project addresses the signifying power of "Shakespeare" as a cultural institution in the three English-speaking societies from 1900 to 1920, when their national identities were being subjected to particular stress. In the US and Canada, the challenge came from unprecedented numbers of non-English-speaking immigrants, while in England, increasing divisions between home country and colonies unsettled English cultural hegemony. "Shakespeare" served, on the one hand, as the icon of a racially pure Englishness, narrated in the myth of "Shakespeare's England" which conflated Elizabethan exploration with the expansion of the Empire. On the other, non-English speakers appropriated Shakespeare as the instrument of their own political and agendas. |