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Shakespeare and the denial of territory
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23 November 2021

LITERARY CRITICISM / Shakespeare, Literary studies: plays and playwrights, PERFORMING ARTS / Theater / History & Criticism, Literary studies: c 1400 to c 1600, Theatre studies
Introduction
Part I: The dynamic of deterritorialisation in King Richard II, King Lear and Coriolanus
1 Swearing allegiance or questioning power
2 Abuse of power and banishment: from ‘effet de retour’ to unnaturalness
3 The talion effect: deterritorialisation for deterritorialisaion
Part II: The dynamic of riposte in King Richard II and Coriolanus
4 The politics of illegal return
5 The necessity of the ‘war machine’
6 Alternatives to the ‘war machine’
Part III: The experience of internal(ised) exile in King Lear
7 Dissembling and avoiding banishment
8 Assuming otherness, or the spiral of degradation
9 Home as a foreign elsewhere
Part IV: The dialectic of endurance and exhaustion in King Richard II and King Lear
10 Mental spaces and types of interiority
11 The limits of endurance and the signs of exhaustion
12 Maps of emotions
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index