The Routledge Handbook of Shakespeare and Interface 1st Edition
The Routledge Handbook of Shakespeare and Interface (1st Edition) by Clifford Werier offers a fresh, interdisciplinary lens on the Bard’s enduring presence across media, technologies, and global cultures. This authoritative volume maps cutting-edge scholarship at the meeting points between Shakespearean texts and the interfaces—digital, theatrical, archival, and performative—that shape how we read, stage, and teach his work today.
Explore thought-provoking essays that bridge literary study, performance theory, adaptation studies, and digital humanities. Contributors examine how interfaces—from interactive screen productions and online platforms to museum displays and classroom technologies—reconfigure authorship, audience, and interpretation. Whether you’re a researcher, lecturer, student, or theatre practitioner, this handbook provides rigorous frameworks and case studies that illuminate contemporary debates and future directions in Shakespeare studies.
Why this edition matters: it synthesizes global perspectives, foregrounds methodological innovation, and responds to the practical needs of scholars in the UK, Europe, North America, and beyond. Clearly written and richly curated, the collection equips readers with tools to analyse adaptations, design pedagogies, and engage with new media contexts.
Perfect for academic libraries, course adoption, and individual specialists, The Routledge Handbook of Shakespeare and Interface (1st Edition) by Clifford Werier is an essential reference for anyone seeking to understand Shakespeare in the age of interfaces. Secure your copy today to deepen your scholarship and expand your classroom or creative practice.
Note: eBooks do not include supplementary materials such as CDs, access codes, etc.


