Much has changed in Europe since the euphoria of the early nineteen-nineties of the last century: massive migration, pan-European Neo-Nazism, a new and active Moslem self-awareness, the resurgence of Russian Nationalism, and a severe financial crisis are just a few items on the historical agenda. In response to this new context Hamlet is no longer simply a vehicle for recovering, or creating, a national cultural memory but has become a trans-national, multi-cultural, ???glocalized??? site for positioning both play and protagonist between quickly changing geo-political developments and local events. This relocation has frequently been paired with the inclusion of various other media discourses in the performance space once reserved for traditional theatre acting, even abandoning this space for extreme locations and situations to relocate Hamlet, play and protagonist, for contemporary audiences: abandoned buildings, rusting shipyards, insane asylums, jails, and even subways. As a result, the desperate cry of actor playing hamlet, the protagonist, in Heiner M??ller???s Hamletmachine (1977): ???I am not Hamlet. I don???t play a part anymore. My words no longer mean anything to me. My drama no longer takes place,??? has been qualified and Hamlet, the play, as well as Hamlet, the protagonist, are being provided with new signification, political and theatrical, as Hamlet???s search for his ???part??? in the new millennium Europe continues.

Looking for his ???Part???: Performing Hamlet in new millennium Europe

2014

Abstract

Much has changed in Europe since the euphoria of the early nineteen-nineties of the last century: massive migration, pan-European Neo-Nazism, a new and active Moslem self-awareness, the resurgence of Russian Nationalism, and a severe financial crisis are just a few items on the historical agenda. In response to this new context Hamlet is no longer simply a vehicle for recovering, or creating, a national cultural memory but has become a trans-national, multi-cultural, ???glocalized??? site for positioning both play and protagonist between quickly changing geo-political developments and local events. This relocation has frequently been paired with the inclusion of various other media discourses in the performance space once reserved for traditional theatre acting, even abandoning this space for extreme locations and situations to relocate Hamlet, play and protagonist, for contemporary audiences: abandoned buildings, rusting shipyards, insane asylums, jails, and even subways. As a result, the desperate cry of actor playing hamlet, the protagonist, in Heiner M??ller???s Hamletmachine (1977): ???I am not Hamlet. I don???t play a part anymore. My words no longer mean anything to me. My drama no longer takes place,??? has been qualified and Hamlet, the play, as well as Hamlet, the protagonist, are being provided with new signification, political and theatrical, as Hamlet???s search for his ???part??? in the new millennium Europe continues.
2014
en
European stage
Hamlet
New millennium
Università degli Studi di Roma La Sapienza
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/243467
Il codice NBN di questa tesi è URN:NBN:IT:UNIROMA1-243467