Weyward Macbeth

Intersections of Race and Performance

By Scott L. Newstok (Editor); Ayanna Thompson (Editor)
(Palgrave Macmillan, Paperback, 9780230616424, 308pp.)

Publication Date: December 22, 2009

Other Editions of This Title: Hardcover

Categories: Film & Video - General, Shakespeare, Theater - History & Criticism

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Description

This volume of entirely new essays provides innovative, interdisciplinary approaches to the various ways Shakespeare’s Macbeth has been adapted and appropriated within the context of American racial constructions. Comprehensive in its scope, this collection addresses the enduringly fraught history of Macbeth in the United States, from its appearance as the first Shakespearean play documented in the American colonies to a proposed Hollywood film version with a black diasporic cast. Over two dozen contributions explore Macbeth’s haunting presence in American drama, poetry, film, music, history, politics, acting, and directing—all through the intersections of race and performance.




About the Author

Scott L. Newstok is Associate Professor of English at Rhodes College, where he organized the 2008 symposium on Macbeth and African-American culture. He has edited Kenneth Burke on Shakespeare (Parlor Press, 2007), and has published a study of the rhetoric of English epitaphs, Quoting Death in Early Modern England: The Poetics of Epitaphs Beyond the Tomb (Palgrave, 2009).

Ayanna Thompson is Associate Professor of English, and an affiliate faculty in Women & Gender Studies and Film & Media Studies at Arizona State University. She is author of Performing Race and Torture on the Early Modern Stage (Routledge, 2008), and the editor of Colorblind Shakespeare: New Perspectives on Race and Performance (Routledge, 2006) and two special issues of Shakespeare Bulletin and Borrowers and Lenders. Her new book project on Shakespeare and race, Passing Strange, is forthcoming from Oxford.




Praise For Weyward Macbeth

"There is something for everyone in this worthy volume."--Choice

"Remarkable."--Jonathan Gil Harris, Studies in English Literature

"Weyward Macbeth is an excellent companion piece for theatre educators looking to enrich classroom instruction or to further students' understanding of fully realized productions. Newstok and Thompson's diverse collection of provocative and enlightening articles serves as a valued addition to Shakespearean scholarship and as a complement to the study of Macbeth."-- John Robert Moss, Theatre Topics

"A welcome addition to the scholarship on theatrical history and practice . . . most of the contributors do show the considerable charge that thinking differently, or highlighting and remembering race, can bring to the play . . . most of the authors at some point refer parenthetically to one or more of their fellow contributors, offering a sense of cogency, a wider arc of discussion, than many such collections manage."--Eric Mallin, College Literature

“In this remarkable and ground breaking book, the editors have put together essays that examine the text and spirit of Macbeth from different and, sometimes, startling perspectives.”—The Griot: The Journal of African American Studies

"This rich and provocative collection of essays is a compilation of historical, theoretical and interdisciplinary viewpoints on ways in which performances of Macbeth have engaged issues of race . . . Weyward Macbeth leaves a reader strangely unsettled—as, of course, does Macbeth. I closed the volume with a new sense of Macbeth's importance to issues of race in the United States, more acutely aware of the ferment and potential of engaging with this intersectional study, and yet also conscious of the still fragmented state of this aptly named "weyward" pursuit . . . Many diverse perspectives are at work in this volume, and not always towards the same ends. But in the last analysis, that diversity seems utterly appropriate: the move here is not to establish a new orthodoxy but to break down received ideas about race and Shakespeare . . . Newstok and Thompson's volume corroborates that vision of multiple Shakespeares and multiple Shakespeareans, both within 'the confines of the script' and beyond it."-- Nicholas Jones, Shakespeare Bulletin

"This collection undoubtedly demonstrates the intractable diversity of American readings of Macbeth over time . . . Weyward Macbeth goes a long way in making the effort to tell that difficult history."-- Robert Ormsby, Modern Drama

Weyward Macbeth deserves reading—and re-reading—because, contrary to popular belief, Orson Welles’s famous “Voodoo” Macbeth (1936) was far from unique in re-casting Shakespeare in a non-traditional setting. With over 100 cross-racial productions recorded here, you are bound to ask: why have so many Americans been repeatedly drawn to this particular play in the context of racial discourses? Read this penetrating study to find out—it’s an intellectual delight.”—James V. Hatch, Professor Emeritus, The Graduate Theatre Program at the City University of New York and co-author of A History of African American Theatre

Weyward Macbeth is an astonishingly wide-ranging volume, taking in an impressive swath of theatrical and cultural history. From Frederick Douglass to Roman Polanski, Middleton to minstrelsy, Aldridge to Ellington, Verdi to hip-hop, the Scottish-Shogun-Voodoo-Tlingit play has sustained a surprising range of only apparently ‘weyward’ efforts to occupy the intersection of race and power through performance.  This is a provocative collection, certain to animate discussion of Macbeth, and much more, for some time to come.”—W. B. Worthen, Alice Brady Pels Professor in the Arts, Barnard College, Columbia University

". . . this fascinating collection of essays is a valuable dialogical contribution not only to race studies in general but also in particular to the history of adaptations and reconsiderations of one of the most ubiquitous Shakespearean tragedies. The twenty-eight contributors represent a variety of approaches and critical positions; some are academic critics, others are actors and directors. This plurality of voices enriches the collection, which will be a significant foundation text for courses on Macbeth in particular or, more generally, as a model for work on adaptation, appropriation, and revision . . . In short, Weyward Macbeth is a remarkably comprehensive and wide-ranging theatrical and political history which truly does the work it claims to do, that is, examine the intersections of race and performance."—Susan H. Smith, University of Pittsburgh

"Weyward Macbeth offers a fascinating account of the use and misuse of Shakespeare's tragedy by a culture trying to confront its own guilt and ghosts."—Maria Browning, Chapter 16

"This extraordinary collection of essays is essential for every student and teacher of Shakespeare. It is exceptional reading with astonishing new information for anyone wishing to keep remarkably abreast of what is happening in American culture."—Glenda E. Gill, This Rough Magic 

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