"OH WONDERFUL, WONDERFUL" CELEBRATING SHAKESPEAREAT THE LIBRARY
A McHenry Library Exhibit, July 8 - September 8, 2006Selected Books
Exhibit Home
The Boy, The Bear, The Baron, The Bardby Gregory RogersPZ7 R6313 Bo 2004 Child Curric
This wordless picture book adds a new twist to the Shakespeare canon for young audiences.When a boy's wayward soccer ball lands inside a theater and suddenly transports its ownerthrough time to the Globe, the Elizabethan era comes to life.
Romeow & Droolietby Nina LadenPZ7 L13735 Rr 2005 Child Curric
A delightful parody of Shakespeare's most famous love story. Romeow (the Felinis' favoritecat) and his brothers decide to attend a costume ball at the home of the cat-hating Barkers,where Romeow, of course, instantly falls madly, passionately in puppy-love with thebeautiful Drooliet.William Shakespeare & the Globeby AlikiPR2920 A55 1999 Child Curric
Although Shakespeare's works have touched people everywhere, very little is known of hislife. Well-loved author and illustrator Aliki pulls together clues from writings, drawings,history, birth, marriage, and death records, and from Shakespeare's own plays, in this vibrantintroduction to one of the greatest writers of all time.
The Shakespeare Newsletter
PR2885 S48
Shakespeare's FlowersBy Jessica Kerr
PR3041 K4
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Roasting the Swan of Avon : Shakespeare's Redoubtable Enemies & Dubious Friendsby Bruce R. Smith
PR2933 F64 S65 1994
O Sweet Mr. Shakespeare I'll have his picture : The Changing Image of Shakespeare'sPerson, 1600-1800.By David Piper ed.
PR2883 L66 1964
Looking at Shakespeareby Dennis KennedyPR3100 K46 2001
A comprehensive account of the main scenographic movements of the century investigateshow visual elements affect Shakespeare on the stage.
Enter the Whole Army : A Pictorial Study of Shakespearean Staging, 1576-1616By C. Walter HodgesPR3095 H59 1999
Fifty of drawings, with accompanying text, which together reconstruct the original staging ofscenes from Shakespeare's plays. It offers imaginative solutions to the puzzling questionswhich surround those early performances at the large public and smaller private theatres.
A Catalogue of Paintings in the Folger Shakespeare Library : "As Imagination Bodies Forth"by William L. Pressly
PR2933 F64 P7 1993
Cultural Shakespeare: essays in the Shakespeare mythby Graham HoldernessPR2970 H64 2001
A collection of writings on such topics as Shakespeare and national culture, the Shakespeareindustry, and the "Shakespeare Myth." These essays constitute a unique resource for the studyof Shakespeare as a cultural phenomenon or ideological apparatus, as distinct fromShakespeare the poet and playwright.
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Repositioning Shakespeareby T. CartelliPR2971 U6 C37 1999
Explores how Shakespeare is appropriated or repositioned in contemporary, postcolonialcultures as they seek to renegotiate his standing as a privileged site of authority.
Shakespeare's Globe Rebuilt
PR2920 S454 1997
Shakespeare in Artby Jane MartineauPR2883 S536 2003
With over eighty paintings accompanied by descriptive essays and eleven scholarly essays byartists who selected Shakespeare's characters as their subjects.
Shakespeare in American Paintingby Richard StudingPR2883 S75 1993
A survey of Shakesperean themes in work by American artists
Searching for Shakespeareby Tarnya CooperPR2931 C667 2006
Examines the connections between theatrical performance and Shakespeare's references inthe visual arts. Featuring numerous portraits and images of costumes, theater models,manuscripts, and maps.
The Shakespeare Tradeby Barbara HodgdonPR2971 U6 H64 1998
Selection of critical essays provides a range of contemporary approaches frompsychoanalytical to cultural materialist and film theory
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The first folio of Shakespeare
PR2751 A15 1996
King Lear
PR2819 A2 I78 1892 Speccoll
As arranged for the stage by Henry Irving, and presented at the Lyceum Theatre, onNovember 10th, 1892
Shakespeare in Harlemby Langston HughesPS3515 U274 S5 Speccoll
With drawings by E. McKnight Kauffer.
Shakespeare on Paper Millsby Peter ThomasZ239 G66 1988c Speccoll
1" x 1" minature book - Illustrated by Donna Thomas. One of 200 copies.
The complete works of William Shakespeare, arranged in their chronological order.
Edited by W.G. Clark and W. Aldis Wright, with an introduction to each play, adapted fromthe Shakespearean primer of Professor Dowden; illustrated by John Gilbert, R.A
PR2753 C48 1884 Speccoll
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Shakespeare rare print collection.Twelve parts in portfolio, each containing twelve loose plates, except the first which containsfourteen.
PR2883.E3
Updated July 11 2006 || Contact Deborah Murphy ([email protected]) or Kristen Sanders ([email protected]) || UCSC Library Home
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