Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of Reception

The article is based on the reception theory by Hans Robert Jauss and analyses how Shakespeare’s works were read, evaluated and interpreted in Lithuanian literature in the 19th to 21th centuries. Some traces of Shakespeare’s works might be observed in letters by Povilas Višinskis and Zemaitė where...

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Main Author: Eglė Keturakienė
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Tartu Press 2019-12-01
Series:Interlitteraria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/16338
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spelling doaj-2fcd8e6e829347debda8751f7edecf8c2020-11-25T03:31:50ZdeuUniversity of Tartu PressInterlitteraria1406-07012228-47292019-12-0124210.12697/IL.2019.24.2.8Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of ReceptionEglė Keturakienė0Vilnius University, Kaunas Faculty The article is based on the reception theory by Hans Robert Jauss and analyses how Shakespeare’s works were read, evaluated and interpreted in Lithuanian literature in the 19th to 21th centuries. Some traces of Shakespeare’s works might be observed in letters by Povilas Višinskis and Zemaitė where Shakespearean drama is indicated as a canon of writing to be followed. It is interesting to note that Lithuanian exodus drama by Kostas Ostrauskas is based on the correspondence between Višinskis and Zemaitė. The characters of the play introduce the principles of the drama of the absurd. Gell’s concept of distributed personhood offered by S. Greenblatt is very suitable for analysing modern Lithuanian literature that seeks a creative relationship with Shakespeare’s works. The concept maintains that characters of particular dramas can break loose from the defined interpretative framework. Lithuanian exodus drama reinterprets Shakespeare’s works and characters. The plays by Ostrauskas and Algirdas Landsbergis explore the variety of human existence and language, the absurd character of the artist, meaningless human existence and the critique of totalitarianism. Modern Lithuanian poetry interprets Shakespeare‘s works so that they serve as a way to contemplate the theme of modern writing, meaningless human existence, the tragic destiny of an individual and Lithuania, miserable human nature, the playful nature of literature, the clownish mask of the poet, the existential silence of childhood, the topic of life as a theatrical performance, the everyday experience of modern women in theatre. The most frequently interpreted dramas are Hamlet, King Lear and Macbeth – Lithuanian literary imagination inscribed them into the field of existentialist and absurd literature. https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/16338Shakespearereception theoryLithuanian literaturedistributed personhoodexistentialist philosophyabsurd drama
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eglė Keturakienė
spellingShingle Eglė Keturakienė
Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of Reception
Interlitteraria
Shakespeare
reception theory
Lithuanian literature
distributed personhood
existentialist philosophy
absurd drama
author_facet Eglė Keturakienė
author_sort Eglė Keturakienė
title Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of Reception
title_short Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of Reception
title_full Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of Reception
title_fullStr Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of Reception
title_full_unstemmed Lithuanian Literature and Shakespeare: Several Cases of Reception
title_sort lithuanian literature and shakespeare: several cases of reception
publisher University of Tartu Press
series Interlitteraria
issn 1406-0701
2228-4729
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The article is based on the reception theory by Hans Robert Jauss and analyses how Shakespeare’s works were read, evaluated and interpreted in Lithuanian literature in the 19th to 21th centuries. Some traces of Shakespeare’s works might be observed in letters by Povilas Višinskis and Zemaitė where Shakespearean drama is indicated as a canon of writing to be followed. It is interesting to note that Lithuanian exodus drama by Kostas Ostrauskas is based on the correspondence between Višinskis and Zemaitė. The characters of the play introduce the principles of the drama of the absurd. Gell’s concept of distributed personhood offered by S. Greenblatt is very suitable for analysing modern Lithuanian literature that seeks a creative relationship with Shakespeare’s works. The concept maintains that characters of particular dramas can break loose from the defined interpretative framework. Lithuanian exodus drama reinterprets Shakespeare’s works and characters. The plays by Ostrauskas and Algirdas Landsbergis explore the variety of human existence and language, the absurd character of the artist, meaningless human existence and the critique of totalitarianism. Modern Lithuanian poetry interprets Shakespeare‘s works so that they serve as a way to contemplate the theme of modern writing, meaningless human existence, the tragic destiny of an individual and Lithuania, miserable human nature, the playful nature of literature, the clownish mask of the poet, the existential silence of childhood, the topic of life as a theatrical performance, the everyday experience of modern women in theatre. The most frequently interpreted dramas are Hamlet, King Lear and Macbeth – Lithuanian literary imagination inscribed them into the field of existentialist and absurd literature.
topic Shakespeare
reception theory
Lithuanian literature
distributed personhood
existentialist philosophy
absurd drama
url https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/16338
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