posted on 2019-12-05, 17:05authored byNicole Fayard
Recent Shakespearean productions, just like current European crises, have
highlighted the exclusionary nature of European identity. In defining the scope of this
special issue, the aim of this introduction is to shift the study of Shakespeare in/ and
Europe away from the ideological field of “unity within diversity” and its attendant
politics of negotiation and mediation. Instead, it investigates whether re-situating
Shakespearean analysis within regimes of exclusionary politics and group conflict
attitudes helps to generate dynamic cultural and social understandings. To what effect is
Shakespeare’s work invoked in relation with the tensions inherent in European societies?
Can such invocations encourage reflections on Europe as a social, political and/ or
cultural entity? Is it possible to conceptualize Shakespearean drama as offering an
effective instrument that connects―or not―the voices of the people of Europe?