IntroductionListening to Shakespeare’s Worlds of Sound
Walter W. Cannon and Laury Magnus
Part I: Sensory Apprehension: Speaking, Hearing, and Seeing on Shakespeare’s Stages
- “Report me and my cause aright”: Hearing the Language of Exhortation in Hamlet and King Lear
David Bevington
- Sound and Sight, Sound vs. Sight in Hamlet
Laury Magnus
- Hearing and Interfering: Solving Puzzles in Theater Productions of Measure for Measure
Gayle Gaskill
Part II: Hearing Gone Awry: Mishearing, Not Hearing, and Silence
- Silence, Mishearing, and Indirection in Much Ado
Caroline Latta
- Writing Letters, Hearing Voices: Epistolary Error in Twelfth Night
Walter W. Cannon
- Staging “Skimble-skamble stuff”: 1 Henry IV and the Welsh Voice
Megan Lloyd and Elizabeth Brown
Part III: Hearing Beyond Words: Shakespeare’s Noise, Sounds, and Music
- Soundscape for an Offstage Beheading: Shakespeare’s Revision of 2 Henry VI 4.1
Stephen Urkowitz
- “Fearful and confused cries”: Birdsong, Sympathy, and the Fear of Sound in Titus Andronicus
Clio Doyle
- “They say it will penetrate”: Music as Aural Violation in The Two Gentlemen of Verona and Cymbeline
R. W. Jones
10Hearing Cues in Shakespeare: Instrumental Music and Sound Effects in the Later Plays
Jennifer Linhart Wood
- Restructuring Audience at Shakespeare’s Globe
Leslie C. Dunn
Part IV: Voices from the Blackfriars Stage
Voices from the Blackfriars Stage: A Virtual Roundtable Discussion from Actors at the American Shakespeare Center:
Benjamin Curns, Sarah Fallon, Allison Glenzer, John Harrell, James Keegan, Patrick Midgley
Hearing on the Blackfriars Stage: A Coda
Ralph Alan Cohen