A Tragedy of Memory
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13133/2283-8759/14472Abstract
Agostino Lombardo investigates the manifold uses of memory in Antony
and Cleopatra which range from the historical and literary tradition, which
lie behind the play, with which an Elizabethan audience would have been
familiar, to the specific theatrical recollection of the performance of
Shakespeare’s own Julius Caesar. The inclusion of memory as well as
enriching the experience of the play itself expands the possibility for the
theatre to be an image of life which, like the theatre, takes place in the
present but is nurtured by the past.
Keywords: Antony and Cleopatra, Julius Caesar, Memory, Theatre, Collective
imagination