Teaching Shakespeare through Performance
Abstract
My personal experience of Teaching English through Shakespeare to students of English at the University
of Salerno in the last decade is recorded in the article and related to the critical and theoretical
development of the relationship between Shakespeare and Performance, which in very recent years
has become an autonomous discipline in Shakespeare Studies (W. B. Worthen).
The first performative turn inaugurated by J. L. Styan’s The Shakespeare Revolution in the 1970s has
been superseded by a second one in the postmodern era marked by the electronic and new media
revolution. In the first phase Shakespeare in performance was still, in a way, subordinated to his text,
while in the second Shakespeare is absorbed in the performative process which is growing more and
more inclusive going from the page to the stage, to the screen, to the new media.
In the last part of the article Almereyda’s Hamlet 2000, following Worthen’s lesson, is considered
paradigmatic in revealing how a “spectral” Shakespeare contributes to a self-reflexive critique of performance.
In the end the 2012 h.a.m.l.e.t (“How A Man Loves Entertainment Technology”) by the
students of the University of Salerno is presented as following the steps of Almereyda’s movie on the
stage, documented by declarations of some contributors to the performance and links on YouTube.