These are the sources and citations used to research slapstick. This bibliography was generated on Cite This For Me on
In-text: (Akhimie, 2018)
Your Bibliography: Akhimie, P., 2018. Shakespeare and the cultivation of difference: race and conduct in the early modern world. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
In-text: (Bergson, 2013)
Your Bibliography: Bergson, H., 2013. Laughter: An Essay on the Meaning of the Comic. New York: Dover Publications.
In-text: (Burrows, 2020)
Your Bibliography: Burrows, I., 2020. Shakespeare for snowflakes: On Slapstick and Sympathy. Winchester: Zero Books.
In-text: (Detmer, 1997)
Your Bibliography: Detmer, E., 1997. Civilizing Subordination: Domestic Violence and The Taming of the Shrew. Shakespeare Quarterly, 48(3), pp.273-294.
In-text: (Everett, 2022)
Your Bibliography: Everett, B., 2022. Barbara Everett · The Fatness of Falstaff · LRB 16 August 1990. [online] London Review of Books. Available at: <https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v12/n15/barbara-everett/the-fatness-of-falstaff> [Accessed 10 January 2022].
In-text: (Freedman, 1981)
Your Bibliography: Freedman, B., 1981. Falstaff’s Punishment: Buffoonery as Defensive Posture in The Merry Wives of Windsor. Shakespeare studies, 14.
In-text: (Grennan, 1980)
Your Bibliography: Grennan, E., 1980. Arm and sleeve: nature and custom in 'The Comedy of Errors'. Philological quarterly, 59(2).
In-text: (Heilman, 1966)
Your Bibliography: Heilman, R., 1966. The Taming Untamed, Or, the Return of the Shrew. Modern language quarterly, 27(2), pp.147-161.
In-text: (Holbrook, 2003)
Your Bibliography: Holbrook, P., 2003. Class X: Shakespeare, Class, and the Comedies. In: R. Dutton, ed., A Companion to Shakespeare's Works. Vol. 3 Comedies. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub.
In-text: (Hunt, 1997)
Your Bibliography: Hunt, M., 1997. Slavery, English Servitude, and ‘The Comedy of Errors’. English literary renaissance, 27(1).
In-text: (Huston, 1981)
Your Bibliography: Huston, J., 1981. Shakespeare's Comedies of Play. New York: Columbia University Press.
In-text: (Huston, 2022)
Your Bibliography: Huston, J., 2022. Playing with Discontinuity: Mistakings and Mistimings in The Comedy of Errors. In: J. Huston, ed., Shakespeare's Comedies of Play..
In-text: (Malakaj and Lyons, 2021)
Your Bibliography: Malakaj, E. and Lyons, A., 2021. Slapstick: An Interdisciplinary Companion. De Gruyter.
In-text: (Nelson Garner, 1988)
Your Bibliography: Nelson Garner, S., 1988. The Taming of the Shrew: Inside or Outside of the Joke?. In: C. Maurice, ed., 'Bad' Shakespeare: revaluations of the Shakespeare canon. London: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
In-text: (Roberts, 1975)
Your Bibliography: Roberts, J., 1975. Falstaff in Windsor Forest: Villain or Victim?. The Folger Shakespeare Library, 26(1), pp.8-15.
In-text: (Saccio, 1984)
Your Bibliography: Saccio, P., 1984. Shrewd and kindly farce. Shakespeare Survey, 37.
In-text: (Shakespeare and Cartwright, 2018)
Your Bibliography: Shakespeare, W. and Cartwright, K., 2018. The Comedy of Errors. London: Bloomsbury Arden Shakespeare.
In-text: (Shakespeare and Melchiori, 2013)
Your Bibliography: Shakespeare, W. and Melchiori, G., 2013. The Merry Wives of Windsor. London: Bloomsbury Arden.
In-text: (Shakespeare and Morris, 1981)
Your Bibliography: Shakespeare, W. and Morris, B., 1981. The Taming of the Shrew. London: Methuen.
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