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Chapter 14 - Afterword: Godard’s King Lear

from Part IV - Lear on the Loose: Migrations and Appropriations of Lear

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 September 2019

Victoria Bladen
Affiliation:
University of Queensland
Sarah Hatchuel
Affiliation:
Université Paul Valéry, Montpellier
Nathalie Vienne-Guerrin
Affiliation:
Université Paul Valéry, Montpellier
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Summary

Godard’s extraordinary, demanding and unremittingly brilliant film, largely mocked and reviled, too often ignored, increasingly inaccessible can act as a kind of metafilmic analogy for the activity in the rest of this volume: its status not as a film of King Lear but as a film about the fragmentary possibility of making – or perhaps more accurately, not making – a film of King Lear, creating for itself a remarkably complex status as critical commentary on the materiality of what it is itself in the process of (not) creating. The chapter offers some brief comments on its commenting as a way to begin to think back over, as well as forward and beyond, the accomplishments of this volume.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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References

Works Cited

Aebischer, P., Greenhalgh, S. and Osborne, L. E. (eds.), Shakespeare and the ‘Live’ Theatre Broadcast Experience (London: Bloomsbury, 2018).Google Scholar
Cartelli, T. and Rowe, K., ‘Surviving Shakespeare: Kristian Levring’s The King Is Alive’ in their New Wave Shakespeare on Screen (Cambridge and Malden: Polity Press, 2007), 142–64.Google Scholar
Habinek, L., ‘Getting to Page Four of King Lear with Jean-Luc Godard’, Shakespeare (British Shakespeare Association) 9 (2013): 7690.Google Scholar
Holland, P., ‘On the Gravy Train: Shakespeare, Memory and Forgetting’, in Holland, P. (ed.), Shakespeare, Memory and Performance (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006), 207–34.Google Scholar

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