ABSTRACT

Floating daggers, enchanted handkerchiefs, supernatural storms, and moving statues have tantalized Shakespeare’s readers and audiences for centuries. The essays in Shakespeare’s Things: Shakespearean Theatre and the Non-Human World in History, Theory, and Performance renew attention to non-human influence and agency in the plays, exploring how Shakespeare anticipates new materialist thought, thing theory, and object studies while presenting accounts of intention, action, and expression that we have not yet noticed or named. By focusing on the things that populate the plays—from commodities to props, corpses to relics—they find that canonical Shakespeare, inventor of the human, gives way to a lesser-known figure, a chronicler of the ceaseless collaboration among persons, language, the stage, the object world, audiences, the weather, the earth, and the heavens.

part I|70 pages

History

part II|60 pages

Theory

chapter 7|16 pages

Eliot and His Problems

Hamlet’s Correlative Objects

chapter 9|11 pages

The Power to Die

Liveliness, Minor Agency, and Shakespeare’s Female Characters

chapter 10|16 pages

Shakespeare’s Dark Ecologies

Rethinking the Environment in Macbeth and King Lear

part III|84 pages

Performance

chapter 11|20 pages

Human Remains

Acting, Objects, and Belief in Performance

chapter 13|13 pages

Art, Objecthood, and the Extended Audience

Forced Entertainment’s Complete Works

chapter 14|18 pages

“Newes from the Dead”

An Unnatural Moment in the History of Natural Philosophy

chapter 15|10 pages

Tail-Piece

Shake That Thing