Works matching IS 15395758 AND DT 2011 AND VI 11
Results: 12
Embodying Androgyne: Treatment of the Male/Female Twin Relationship in Shakespeare and Webster.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 184
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
ACTING SHAKESPEARE: A Roundtable Discussion with Artists from the Utah Shakespeare Festival's 2011 Production of A Midsummers Night's Dream.
- Published in:
- 2011
- By:
- Publication type:
- Proceeding
"As Crooked in Thy Manners as Thy Shape": Reshaping Deformity in Loncraine's Richard III.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 155
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
Lipsian Neostoicism and Shakespeare's Friar Laurence in Romeo and Juliet.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 130
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
'I Must Have Some Relief or It Will Kill Me': Abraham Lincoln's Reliance on Shakespeare.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 113
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
Time and Stage Directions in Quarto 1 and Quarto 2 of Romeo and Juliet.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 97
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
The Economy of Appearance: Language and Forgiving in The Winter's Tale.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 67
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
Reasoning with the Murderer: The Killing of Clarence in Richard III.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 51
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
The Kindest Cut of All: Editing Shakespeare's Scripts for Performance.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 41
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
The Law of the Father: Patriarchal Economy in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 28
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
The Editor, The Artist, and the Early Texts of Shakespeare: Moving Forward By Looking Back.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 16
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article
"Thrice Great Pompey": Shakespeare's Ironic Use of Pompey in Love's Labour's Lost, Measure for Measure, Julius Caesar, and Antony and Cleopatra.
- Published in:
- Journal of the Wooden O, 2011, v. 11, p. 1
- By:
- Publication type:
- Article