CONTENTS
PAUL BRUMMELL
FOREWORD: Shakespeare and Romania—an Enduring Love Affair, pp. 1-6
MONICA MATEI-CHESNOIU
INTRODUCTION: Et in Elysium Ego: Shakespeare and the Place of Memory, pp. 7-16
JEAN-JACQUES CHARDIN
The Heart and the Eye in King Lear, pp. 17-27
PIA BRÎNZEU
After Four Centuries: Shakespeare’s Ghostly Shadows, pp. 29-40
MĂDĂLINA NICOLAESCU
Socialist Readings of Shakespeare: Hard-Line versus Alternative Perspectives, pp. 41-49
ODETTE BLUMENFELD
Ophelia’s Madness and Its Representation in Two Romanian Productions, pp. 51-70
MONICA MATEI-CHESNOIU
Shakespeare’s Tercentenary in the Old Kingdom of Romania: En Route to Secularization and Modernity, pp. 71-82
GEORGE VOLCEANOV
On Romania’s Contribution to The Great Feast of Languages: Shakespeare World Translation Conference, Cologne, 4–8 June 2016, pp. 83-95
NICOLETA CINPOEȘ
Hamlet from the Bloc: 1990 and 2010, pp. 97-107.
MARINA CAP-BUN
Why Was Shakespeare so Fond of Hecuba?, pp. 109-120
ANA MARIA MUNTEANU
Review: Postmodern and Classical–A Midsummer Night’s Dream, pp. 121-127
ESTELLA CIOBANU
“Alas poor Yorick!” Bodies out of Joint in Shakespeare, Baudelaire, Seamus Heaney, Andreas Vesalius and Govard Bidloo, pp. 129-153
ADRIAN PAPAHAGI
More Ado about “Nothing” in King Lear, pp. 155-170
OANA-ALIS ZAHARIA
Translating Shakespeare into Romanian: On the Eve and in the Aftermath of the 1848 Revolution, pp. 171-180
LUCIA OPREANU
Secret Codes and Small Rewrites: Fluid Authorship, Intertextual Games and the Power of Words in Doctor Who–“The Shakespeare Code” and Other Revisitations of Shakespeare, pp. 181-196
RICHARD WILSON
AFTERWORD: Danube and Avon: Shakespeare in Elysium: Romanian Afterlives, pp. 197-203