1st Edition

New Psychoanalytic Readings of Shakespeare Cool Reason and Seething Brains

Edited By James Newlin, James W. Stone Copyright 2024
262 Pages
by Routledge

262 Pages
by Routledge

262 Pages
by Routledge

It has been over two decades since the publication of the last major edited collection focused on psychoanalysis and early modern culture. In Shakespeare studies, the New Historicism and cognitive psychology have hindered a dynamic conversation engaging depth-oriented models of the mind from taking place. The essays in New Psychoanalytic Readings of Shakespeare: Cool Reason and Seething Brains... Read more

James Newlin and James W. Stone: Introduction

Cryptonomy, Necrology, Ghosts

  1. Adam Rzepka – "That dim monument": The fantasy of the crypt in Romeo and Juliet and Antigone
  2. Kasey Evans – The Time Is Out of Joint: Hamlet Speaks to the Dead
  3. Andrew Barnaby – "Mine Own, and Not Mine Own": Hamlet, Twelfth Night, and Early-Modern Psychotheology
  4. Festivity and Sacrifice

  5. Russell J. Bodi – Hamlet’s Nobler Choice: The Interior Game
  6. James W. Stone – "Is this a holiday?": Festivity and Sacrifice in Julius Caesar
  7. History and Trauma

  8. Devori Kimbro – "All Badged with Blood": Equivocation as Trauma in Macbeth
  9. Gabriel A. Rieger – "Crawling between earth and heaven": Sadomasochism and Subjectivity in Hamlet
  10. Zackariah Long – The Primal Scene in Pericles: Trauma, Typology, and Mythology
  11. Gender Trouble

  12. W. Reginald Rampone, Jr. – Phallic Fantasies in The Taming of the Shrew
  13. Drew Daniel – The Gilded Puddle: Scatology, Race and Masochism in Antony and Cleopatra
  14. James Newlin – Staging the Woman in The Tempest and Ex Machina
  15. Shakespeare and the Matter of Clinical Practice

  16. Nicholas Bellinson – ‘method in’t’: Hamlet as analysand
  17. Richard M. Waugaman – What Shakespeare Teaches Us about Psychological Complexity
  18. Vera J. Camden – An Afterword on Apocalypse and Afterwardness

Biography

James Newlin is a lecturer at Case Western Reserve University in the Department of English. He is the author of Uncanny Fidelity: Recognizing Shakespeare in Twenty-First-Century Film and Television (University of Alabama Press, 2024). He has also published in The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Shakespeare Bulletin, SubStance, and elsewhere.

James W. Stone is a lecturer on Shakespeare at American University, at the Osher Institute at Johns Hopkins, and at OLLI at American University. He taught at the American University in Cairo and at the National University of Singapore. He is the author of Crossing Gender in Shakespeare: Feminist Psychoanalysis and the Difference Within (Routledge, 2010) and articles on Shakespeare, Milton, the Renaissance Ovid, film theory, and contemporary Egyptian art. His current project is co-editing a collection of essays by British scholars on Shakespeare and psychoanalysis.

“This is a timely volume that will hopefully herald a revival of psychoanalytically oriented inquiry in early modern literary and cultural studies… It might also develop in dialogue with the renewed interest in psychoanalysis happening in para-academic institutions and publications. This book is a welcome contribution to that conversation to come.”

--Emily Shortslef, University of Kentucky

 

“New Psychoanalytic Readings of Shakespeare: Cool Reason and Seething Brains is an important contribution to the literature linking psychoanalytic theory with the works of Shakespeare… In these times of marked, and seemingly irreconcilable divisiveness, the importance of literature in creating unifying platforms through which to appreciate other perspectives cannot be overstated.”

--Christopher W. T. Miller,  University of Maryland School of Medicine

 

“New Psychoanalytic Readings of Shakespeare: Cool Reason and Seething Brains makes an impressive entrance onto the ever-changing stage of Shakespeare studies… It is difficult to convey the richness of this collection in the space of a brief review.”

--Madelon Sprengnether, University of Minnesota