Sederi Yearbook 29

A.S.G. Edwards, “William Forrest: Poetry, politics, script and power.” SEDERI 29 (2019): 163–78.   DOI: https://doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2019.7                                                          Download PDF   Abstract This article examines the poetic and scribal activities […]

Sederi Yearbook 29

Sánchez-García, Inmaculada N. “Uneasy lies the heart that wears a badge: James Gray’s We Own the Night as a Gen-X Henriad.” SEDERI 29 (2019): 135–60.   DOI: https://doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2019.6                                                          […]

Sederi Yearbook 29

Elizabeth Mazzola, “Suffocated mothers, stabbed sisters, drowned daughters: when women choose death on Shakespeare’s stage.” SEDERI 29 (2019): 109–33.   DOI: https://doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2019.5                                                          Download PDF   Abstract Women who […]

Sederi Yearbook 29

Clark Hulse, “Ovid’s urban metamorphosis.” SEDERI 29 (2019): 85–108.   DOI: https://doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2019.4                                                          Download PDF   Abstract In Book XV of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Pythagoras meditates on the rise and […]

Sederi Yearbook 29

Sophie Chiari, “The limner’s art in Shakespeare’s Macbeth.” SEDERI 29 (2019): 61–83.   DOI: https://doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2019.3                                                          Download PDF   Abstract Macbeth is a graphic work whose visual rhetoric mirrors […]

Sederi Yearbook 29

Delilah Bermudez Brataas, “The blurring of genus, genre, and gender in Margaret Cavendish’s utopias.” SEDERI 29 (2019): 35–59.   DOI: https://doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2019.2                                                          Download PDF   Abstract The Blazing World […]

Sederi Yearbook 29

Manel Bellmunt-Serrano, “Leskov’s rewriting of Lady Macbeth and the processes of adaptation and appropriation.” SEDERI 29 (2019): 11–33.   DOI: https://doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2019.1                                                          Download PDF   Abstract This article tries to […]

Sederi 29

Sederi 29
Sederi 29 — 2019
EDITOR
Ana Sáez-Hidalgo
MANAGING EDITOR
Francisco J. Borge López
REVIEW EDITOR
María José Mora
ISSN 1135-7789

Download this volume in PDF 

ARTICLES Pag.        
Bellmunt-Serrano, Manuel. Leskov’s rewriting of Lady Macbeth and the processes of adaptation and appropriation 11-33
Bermudez Brataas, Delilah. The blurring of genus, genre, and gender in MArgaret Cavendish’s utopias 35-59
Chiari, Sophie. The limner’s art in Shakespeare’s Macbeth 61-83
Hulse, Clark. Ovid’s urban metamorphosis 85-108
Mazzola, Elizabeth. Suffocated mothers, stabbed sisters, drowned daughters: when women choose death on Shakespeare’s stage 109-33
Sánchez García, Inmaculada N. Uneasy lies the heart that wears a badge: James Gray’s We Own the Night as a Gen-X Henriad 135-60

NOTES Pag.        
Edwards, A.S.G. William Forrest: Poetry, politics, script and power 163-78

REVIEWS Pag.        
Patrick Cheney, English Authorship and the Early Modern Sublime (by Jonathan P. A. Sell) 183-88
Paul Edmondson and Ewan Fernie, eds. New Places: Shakespeare and Civic Creativity (by Francesca Rayner) 189-93
Keir Elam, Shakespeare’s Pictures: Visual Objects in the Dramas, and B. J. Sokol, Shakespeare’s Artists: The Painters, Sculptors, Poets and Musicians in his Plays and Poems (by Jonathan P. A. Sell) 194-98
Carme Font, Women’s Prophetic Writings in Seventeenth-Century Britain (by Beatriz Hernández Pérez) 199-204
Sebastián Fox Morcillo, De honore. Estudio y traducción (by Jesús López-Peláez Casellas) 205-210
José Manuel González, ed., José María Ferri and María del Carmen Irles Vicente, coord. Cervantes-Shakespeare 1616-2016: Contexto, influencia, relación. Context, Influence, Relation (by Mercedes Salvador-Bello) 211-15
Ángel-Luis Pujante and Keith Gregor, eds. Romeo y Julieta en España: Las versiones neoclásicas (by Jesús Tronch) 216-20
Poonam Trivedi and Paromita Chakravarti, eds. Shakespeare and Indian Cinemas: Local Habitations (by Rosa García-Periago) 221-26
Sónia Baptista, I Call Her Will (by Francesca Rayne) 227-29