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Keynote Speaker:

Prof. GARY TAYLOR (Florida State University)

Keynote Speech Title:

"The History of Shakespeare's History Plays"

GARY TAYLOR, Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor, Ph.D., Cambridge, is General Editor of the New Oxford Shakespeare, including Complete Works: Modern Critical Edition (2016), Complete Works: Critical Reference Edition (2017), Authorship Companion (2017), and New Oxford Shakespeare Online (2017), which combines and expands on all the print versions. He was also general editor of the Collected Works of "our other Shakespeare," Thomas Middleton (Oxford, 2008), which won the Modern Language Association's biennial prize for a Distinguished Scholarly edition and the Emily Dietz award for outstanding publication in early modern studies; he also co-edited The Oxford Handbook of Thomas Middleton (2012), the largest collection of new critical essays on Middleton ever published. The "Middleton Trilogy" is now available in paperback. He general-edited two series published by Palgrave, "Signs of Race" and "History of Text Technologies". He founded the interdisciplinary History of Text Technologies program at Florida State University, and has written about the practice and theory of editing in various periods and genres; in 2006 he gave the McKenzie lectures at Oxford University on Edward Blount, the chief publisher of the 1623 Shakespeare folio. Taylor's Moment by Moment by Shakespeare (MacMillan, 1985) was the winner of a Choice Award for "Outstanding Academic Book." His other books include a history of Shakespeare's reputation (Reinventing Shakespeare, 1989: "the most ambitious book on Shakespeare ever written", according to a review in Shakespeare Quarterly), a theory of artistic reputations generally (Cultural Selection, 1996: "brilliant insights and beautifully reasoned prose… an original and striking analysis of culture", according to the New York Times Book Review), and "an abbreviated history of Western manhood" (Castration, 2000: "terrific reading," according to Salon.com). He co-edited the first collection of essays on Shakespeare and Fletcher's partially-lost play The History of Cardenio (Oxford, 2012), and the same year his "creative reconstruction" of Cardenio was performed in Indianapolis, where it was also the subject of an international scholarly colloquium, a PBS documentary, and another collection of scholarly essays (Palgrave, 2013). His play has most recently been performed by the Richmond Shakespeare Society (2017). Taylor has also worked to communicate contemporary literary theory and criticism to a mass audience (newspapers, radio, TV, museums and theatres in North America and UK, including three Platforms at the Royal National Theatre, London). He was widely interviewed in 2016 in connection with the New Oxford Shakespeare's identification of Christopher Marlowe as Shakespeare's collaborator on the three Henry VI plays. Taylor is currently working on the New Oxford Shakespeare Complete Alternative Versions, to be published in print and online by Oxford University Press.

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Keynote Speaker:

Prof. Yu Jin Ko (Wellesley College)

Keynote Speech Title:

"Once More unto the Breach: Shakespearean Universality Revisited"

YU JIN KO's publications have centered on Shakespeare, with an emphasis on performance. His first book, Mutability and Division on Shakespeare’s Stage, appeared in 2004. He has also co-edited a book collection that brings together essays from scholars and theatre professionals: Shakespeare's Sense of Character: On the Page and From the Stage. His articles and reviews have continued to focus on Shakespeare in performance, both in the theatre and on film. They include pieces an essay on a production of Macbeth by inmates of a correctional institution ("Macbeth Behind Bars") as well as a study of A Midsummer Night's Dream in performance (“Violence and Consensual Imagination in A Midsummer Night’s Dream”). Over the years, however, He has moved into the area of Shakespeare in production across the globe, especially in the East. Some recent essays include: “Intercultural Intermediality: The Unspoken Text in Intercultural Film Adaptations of Shakespeare” and "The site of burial in two Korean Hamlets." In a related vein, He has also been studying the afterlives of Shakespeare's works across the globe. A recent foray into this area is "Youth, Authenticity and Social Change from Shakespeare's Hamlet to Yoon Dong Ju." He is also finishing up a book project titled From the Wooden O to the Yards of Seoul: Shakespeare's Original Stage Conditions and their Afterlives across the Globe. Finally, He has been putting his toes into the realm of translation, with his latest effort being a co-translator for the Korean-American artist Kim Wonsook's In the Garden: Stories of Kim Wonsook's Paintings.

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