CEU Press
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Foreword: The Ghosts of History Redux: Intertextuality, Rewriting, Adaptation
Jozefina Komporaly
PART I. The Russian and French Masters
1. The Political Ghosts and Ideological Phantasms of Nic Ularu’s The Cherry Orchard, A Sequel
2. Adapting Molière and Jules Verne to Soviet Censorship: The Alchemical Politics of Bulgakov’s A Cabal of Hypocrites and The Crimson Island
3. György Spiró’s The Impostor: Rethinking Molière’s Tartuffe for Communist Hungary
PART II: Shakespeare in Central and Eastern Europe
4. Stalinist “Traitors” and “Saboteurs”: Matéi Vișniec’s Richard III Will Not Take Place or Scenes from the Life of Meyerhold
5. Staging Hamlet as Political No Exit in Géza Bereményi’s Halmi
6. Nedyalko Yordanov’s The Murder of Gonzago: Reading Bulgaria’s Communist Political Culture through Shakespeare’s Hamlet
PART III. Inserting God into Politics
7. Specters of State Power, History, and Politics of the Stage: Vlad Zografi’s Peter or The Sun Spots
8. Inserting God into the Communist Personality Cult: Stefan Tsanev’s The Other Death of Joan of Arc
Consclusion
Bibliography
Index
Ileana Alexandra Orlich is Professor of Romanian, English and Comparative Literature. She is Head of German, Romanian and Slavic Faculty and Director of the Arizona State University Romanian Studies Program and teaches a variety of culture and literature courses with a comparative and interdisciplinary focus.