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Shakespeare Across Cultures

By Dr. Joseph Koyippally Joseph   |   Central University of Kerala
Learners enrolled: 550


Shakespeare is the most translated, staged, filmed and studied author in world literature. He is adapted, localized, domesticated and appropriated on the page, stage, and other media in many languages and cultures across the world. This 4-credit course, which analyses how Shakespeare influences and is influenced by the languages and cultures of the world, is intended for postgraduate students of English Literature. The objectives of this course in which many Shakespeare experts in India will guide students are to analyse Shakespeare by using discourses of language, race, gender, identity and geopolitics, explore how Shakespeare is negotiated on page, stage, screen and classroom discourses, outline Shakespeare adaptations and the responses they evoke in diverse cultures, demonstrate how cultures transfigure Shakespeare in their literary and cultural terrain, illustrate the reasons for reworking and adapting Shakespeare in various cultures, show how contemporary viewers critically respond to the reworkings of Shakespeare, and find alternative frameworks to rework the essentially Eurocentric Shakespeare discourses.
Summary
Course Status : Completed
Course Type : Elective
Language for course content : English
Duration : 15 weeks
Category :
  • Humanities and Social Sciences
Credit Points : 4
Level : Postgraduate
Start Date : 31 Jul 2023
End Date : 31 Oct 2023
Enrollment Ends : 31 Aug 2023
Exam Date :

Page Visits



Course layout

Weeks (13) Weekly Lecture Topics (Module Titles)

1 Day 1: 31.07.23 1 : Shakespeare Across Cultures: Introduction
Day 2: 01.08.23 2 : Canon and Culture: Universality of Shakespeare
Day 3: 02.08.23 3 : Cultural Imperialism and Global Shakespeare
Day 4:
Day 5:

2 Day 1: 07.08.23 4 : Colonialism and Shakespeare
Day 2: 08.08.23 5 : Shakespeare and Imperialism of the English Language
Day 3: 09.08.23 6 : Shakespeare as Icon and Industry
Day 4: 10.08.23 7 : Shakespeare and Modern Culture
Day 5:
3 Day 1: 14.08.23 8 : Shakespeare Our Contemporary
Day 2: 15.08.23 9 : Shakespeare on Page
Day 3: 16.08.23 10 : Shakespeare on Stage
Day 4:
Day 5:

4 Day 1: 21.08.23 11 : Shakespeare on Screen
Day 2: 22.08.23 12 : Shakespeare in New Media
Day 3: 23.08.23 13 : The Internet Shakespeare
Day 4:
Day 5:
5 Day 1: 28.08.23 14 : Multicultural Shakespeare
Day 2: 29.08.23 15 : Digital Shakespeare
Day 3: 30.08.23 16 : Shakespearean Semiotics
Day 4:
Day 5:
6 Day 1: 04.09.23 17 : Shakespeare Translations
Day 2: 05.09.23 18 : Shakespeare and the Language of Translation
Day 3: 06.09.23 19 : Rewriting and Adapting Shakespeare
Day 4:
Day 5:

7 Day 1: 11.09.23 20 : Shakespeare as Children’s Literature
Day 2: 12.09.23 21 : Shakespeare and Literary Polysystems
Day 3: 13.09.23 22 : Challenges in Shakespeare Translation
Day 4:
Day 5:

8 Day 1: 18.09.23 23 : Political and National Appropriations of Shakespeare
Day 2: 19.09.23 24 : Cross-Cultural and Transcultural Shakespeare
Day 3: 20.09.23 25 : Shakespeare Criticism and Theory
Day 4:
Day 5:

9 Day 1: 25.09.23 26 : Political Shakespeare
Day 2: 26.09.23 27: Shakespeare and Gender
Day 3: 27.09.23 28 : Shakespeare and Race
Day 4:
Day 5:

10 Day 1: 02.10.23 29 : Shakespeare and Popular Culture
Day 2: 03.10.23 30 : Postcolonial Shakespeare
Day 3: 04.10.23 31 : Intercultural Shakespeare
Day 4:
Day 5:

11 Day 1: 09.10.23 32 : Foreignization of Shakespeare
Day 2: 10.10.23 33: Localizing Shakespeare
Day 3: 11.10.23 34 : Shakespeare and Cultures of Performance
Day 4:  
Day 5:

12 Day 1: 16.10.23 35 : Shakespeare and Indigenous Performances
Day 2: 17.10.23 36 : Shakespeare in Indian Language Translations
Day 3: 18.10.23 37 : Shakespeare and Indian Cinema
Day 4:  
Day 5:  

13 Day 1: 23.10.23 38 : Shakespeare in India: Films
Day 2: 24.10.23 39 : Shakespeare and India: Theatre
Day 3: 25.10.23 40 : Shakespeare Scholarship in India
Day 4:
Day 5:

Books and references

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1gI32S8bai3PpbrLsEg55_L-Kf6399K9x/view?usp=sharing

Instructor bio


Dr. Joseph Koyippally Joseph (Associate Professor)
English and Comparative Literature
Central University of Kerala

Dr. Joseph Koyippally Joseph is an Associate Professor in English and Comparative Literature at the Central University of Kerala, Kasaragod. After MA in English (University of Kerala) and PhD on Shakespeare’s The Tempest (JNU), he worked taught English language and Literature at Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi; Sherubtse College, Bhutan; and University of Hail, Saudi Arabia before the Central University of Kerala. He has published two books and more than 30 articles in journals and books. One of his area of interest are Shakespeare translations and adaptations in India and is guiding PhD theses on the subject focussing on Kerala. 

Course certificate

30 Marks is allocated for Internal Assessment and 70 Marks is allocated for external proctored examination Depending on the marks scored in both, you will be awarded marks and Grade from the Central University of Kerala through SWAYAM/CEC/EGC This Elective Course carries 4 Elective Credits


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