This major interdisciplinary collection captures the vitality and increasingly global significance of the Faust figure in literature, theatre and music.
Bringing together scholars from around the world, International Faust Studies examines questions of adaptation, reception and translation centering on Faust discourse in a diversity of cultural contexts, including the Chinese, Japanese, Indian, African, Brazilian and Canadian, as well as the European, British and American. It broadens the field by including studies of lesser known or neglected Faust discourse, including the translation of Goethe's Faust recently attributed to Coleridge, in addition to the canonical.
This major interdisciplinary collection captures the vitality and increasingly global significance of the Faust figure in literature, theatre and music.
Bringing together scholars from around the world, International Faust Studies examines questions of adaptation, reception and translation centering on Faust discourse in a diversity of cultural contexts, including the Chinese, Japanese, Indian, African, Brazilian and Canadian, as well as the European, British and American. It broadens the field by including studies of lesser known or neglected Faust discourse, including the translation of Goethe's Faust recently attributed to Coleridge, in addition to the canonical.
Lorna Fitzsimmons is Associate Professor at California State University, Dominguez Hills, Los Angeles, USA.
Introduction: Lorna Fitzsimmons (California State University)Part I: Anteriorities 1. Global Dominion: Faust and Alexander the Great: Arnd Bohm (Carleton University) 2. Hanswurst, Kasperle, Pickelh?ring and Faust, Jane Curran (Dalhousie University, Canada) Part II: Faust in Context 3. 'Why all this noise?':Reading Sound In Faust I & II: Alan Corkhill (University of Queensland) 4. Technology as Timelessness: Building and Language in Faust: Claudia Brodsky (Princeton University) 5. Faust and Satan: Conflicting l³-