A fascinating collection that brilliantly teases out the tension between the order and authority of a classical Greece and the very different status and nature of a Greece under Ottoman rule.
Times Higher Education
<i>Shakespeare and Greece</i>, a collection of essays edited by Alison Findlay and Vassiliki Markidou, contributes to a small but growing body of work addressing an important and understudied topic. Framed by an introduction situating the project in Shakespeare’s literary and cultural landscape, the book’s eight essays explore different intersections between Shakespeare and the Greek world. Their premises and methodologies vary, but together they make a strong case for the pervasiveness and importance of Shakespeare’s Greek engagements … This volume illuminates a rich topic, and opens inviting directions for further study.
Renaissance Quarterly
Introduction, Alison Findlay and Vassiliki Markidou
1. The Comedy of Errors and ‘farthest Greece’, Kent Cartwright
2. Embodying Greece in Elizabethan England: Venus and Adonis and Love’s Labour’s Lost, Liz Oakley-Brown
3. Greece ‘digested in a play’: Consuming Greek Heroism in The School of Abuse and Troilus and Cressida, Efterpi Mitsi
4. ‘All’s with me meet that I can fashion fit’: Physis and Nomos in King Lear, Nic Panagopoulo
5. Hospitality, Friendship and Republicanism in Timon of Athens, John Drakakis
6. ’To take our imagination / From bourn to bourn, region to region’: The Politics of Greek Topographies in Pericles, Vassiliki Markidou
7. Reshaping Athens in A Midsummer Night’s Dream and The Two Noble Kinsmen, Alison Findlay
8. A Midsummer Night’s Dream in Modern Athens, Mara Yanni
Selected Bibliography