
Shakespeare and Popular Music
Adam Hansen(Author)
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Published on 22. November 2010
Book
Paperback/Softback
200 pages
978-1-4411-2698-6 (ISBN)
Description
Exploring the interactions between Shakespeare and popular music, this book links these seeming polar opposites, showing how musicians have woven the Bard into their sounds. How have Shakespearean characters, words, texts and iconography been represented and reworked through popular music? Do all types of popular music represent Shakespeare in the same ways? And how do the links between Shakespeare and popular music challenge what we think we know about both Shakespeare and popular music? One of the enduring myths about how Shakespeare and popular music relate is that they don't - after all the antagonism between high culture and pop music could be considered mutual. In the first book of its kind, Adam Hansen shows what happens to Shakespeare when he exists in and becomes popular music, in all its diverse and glorious forms. Exploring these interactions reveals as much about the functions of the diverse genres of popular music as it does about Shakespeare as a global cultural form.
Discussing a wide range of examples in a critically-informed but lively and accessible style, this book brings something new to Shakespeare and popular music, capturing the excitement and energy of both for its readers.
Discussing a wide range of examples in a critically-informed but lively and accessible style, this book brings something new to Shakespeare and popular music, capturing the excitement and energy of both for its readers.
Reviews / Votes
"This unique book combines a pop music fan's dedication with an academic's rigour - and gives us an analysis of Shakespeare in popular music and popular music in Shakespeare, in which Shakespeare is both sampler and sampled. From ballads to the Beatles and from Elizabethan sermons to internet fan sites, Hansen's enthusiasm is capacious and revealing. The rest certainly is not silence in a book which collapses distinctions between high and low culture, and is as comfortable with House as with Hamlet." -- Emma Smith, Fellow and Tutor in English, Senior Tutor, University of Oxford, UK 'Hansen's passion for both Shakespeare and popular music is infectious and makes me want to revisit Shakespeare's plays. I highly recommend this book so go and order it from your local independent bookstore or visit Continuum's site.' -- Elaine Cusack, rocksbackpagesblog.com Adam Hansen's Shakespeare and Popular Music is a work clearly informed by the author's passion for both of these subjects... -- Routledge ABES Reviewed in The Times Literary Supplement "Adam Hansen offers an audacious analysis of the uses to which contemporary music has put Shakespeare and 'Shakespeare' has put contemporary music. The result is a delightful bricolage of early-modern and post-modern cultural history in which Freud, Adorno and Walter Benjamin rub shoulders with Duke Ellington, Cowboy Jack Clement, the Kaiser Chiefs, numerous rappers, punks and folk-singers as vital interpreters of the Shakespearean text." -- Greg Walker, Masson Professor of English Literature, University of Edinburgh, UKMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
254 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4411-2698-6 (9781441126986)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Adam Hansen
Shakespeare and Popular Music
E-Book
09/2010
1st Edition
Continuum Publishing Corporation
€32.99
Available for download
Person
Adam Hansen is Lecturer in English at Northumbria University, UK.
Content
Introduction: A Whole Lotta Shakespeare Goin' On?; 1. 'Where should this music be?': Locating Shakespeare in/and/against Modern Popular Music; 2. Shakespeare and the Technologies of Pop; 3. Shakespeare, the Beatles and the 60s; 4. Predicting Riots? Shakespeare, Pop and Politics; 5. 'High Class Dreams': Shakespeare, Status and Country Music; 6. 'Shakespeare with a twist': The Bard, Race, Gender and Popular Music; 7. Rockin' All Over the Globe; 8. Fans, Fans, Fans, Lend Me Your Ears; Index.