Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authority

This article considers the impact of digital technologies on Shakespeare's status as author. Digital technology encourages a more democratic engagement with literature which privileges the reader and thereby moderates the author's powerful hold over their text. As a result, it is to be exp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jenni Ramone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ghent University 2011-11-01
Series:Authorship
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.ugent.be/authorship/article/view/778/785
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author Jenni Ramone
author_facet Jenni Ramone
author_sort Jenni Ramone
collection DOAJ
description This article considers the impact of digital technologies on Shakespeare's status as author. Digital technology encourages a more democratic engagement with literature which privileges the reader and thereby moderates the author's powerful hold over their text. As a result, it is to be expected that with the increased availability of digital tools, Shakespeare's status and conventional, universalist readings of his works might decline. Technologies have the potential to open up Shakespeare's works to new kinds of readers: these include academics studying Shakespeare's works perspectives outside the traditional disciplines of literary and performance studies, but also the general public who appropriate Shakespeare when shaping their online identities, or contribute to digital repositories of Shakespeare references. My paper considers the contradiction that while, in theory, digital technologies invite the reader to wrest control from the author, in practice those tools are sometimes used to bolster Shakespeare's universal value and genius. I consider the ultimate effect on Shakespeare's author status when digital technologies are applied to his works, and suggest that one way to measure this might be to explore appropriations of Shakespeare's characters online by individual internet users.
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spelling doaj.art-963ecf25e8e34229b5e438de18acb3182022-12-22T00:33:12ZengGhent UniversityAuthorship2034-46432011-11-0111Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authorityJenni RamoneThis article considers the impact of digital technologies on Shakespeare's status as author. Digital technology encourages a more democratic engagement with literature which privileges the reader and thereby moderates the author's powerful hold over their text. As a result, it is to be expected that with the increased availability of digital tools, Shakespeare's status and conventional, universalist readings of his works might decline. Technologies have the potential to open up Shakespeare's works to new kinds of readers: these include academics studying Shakespeare's works perspectives outside the traditional disciplines of literary and performance studies, but also the general public who appropriate Shakespeare when shaping their online identities, or contribute to digital repositories of Shakespeare references. My paper considers the contradiction that while, in theory, digital technologies invite the reader to wrest control from the author, in practice those tools are sometimes used to bolster Shakespeare's universal value and genius. I consider the ultimate effect on Shakespeare's author status when digital technologies are applied to his works, and suggest that one way to measure this might be to explore appropriations of Shakespeare's characters online by individual internet users.http://ojs.ugent.be/authorship/article/view/778/785ShakespeareCanonAuthorshipJenniRamone
spellingShingle Jenni Ramone
Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authority
Authorship
Shakespeare
Canon
Authorship
Jenni
Ramone
title Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authority
title_full Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authority
title_fullStr Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authority
title_full_unstemmed Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authority
title_short Online appropriations: collaborative technologies, digital texts, and Shakespeare’s authority
title_sort online appropriations collaborative technologies digital texts and shakespeare s authority
topic Shakespeare
Canon
Authorship
Jenni
Ramone
url http://ojs.ugent.be/authorship/article/view/778/785
work_keys_str_mv AT jenniramone onlineappropriationscollaborativetechnologiesdigitaltextsandshakespearesauthority