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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
한국고전르네상스영문학회 고전 르네상스 영문학 고전 르네상스 영문학 제15권 제1호
발행연도
2006.1
수록면
93 - 113 (21page)

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Yeung-ah KimIn an interview, Michael Radford, the director of the recent Shakespeare film The Merchant of Venice(2004), admitted that 9.11 was an important factor in his filming this notoriously problematic Shakespeare play. The catastrophic collapse of Twin Towers on September 11, 2001, as i ek points out, is a call to awaken the westerners into the 'desert of the real' of the 21st century, which turns out to be a place riddled with racial hatred and violence. Radford's The Merchant of Venice is a response to the call through using Shakespeare. While portraying Shylock's terrible revenge as a natural outcome of Venetian society--both in that it is an expression of anger at the racist society and it is an extreme mirror image of its ruling spirit--the film indicates that the real enemy of our world is not the threat of Islam terrorists but the current capitalist world system which has built racism into its structures from the outset. This film's insight owes a lot to the original play and testifies to the greatness and relevance of Shakespeare play in our time. But this film also shows that the play, like other texts, is embedded in the histories from which it derives. While Shakespeare envisions 'a congruence between economic and moral conduct' and 'the compatibility between bourgeois self-interest and aristocratic social responsibility' through the happy marriage of Portia and Bassanio, the film says that Shakespeare's utopian dream is no longer possible for us by transforming the happy ending of the original play into a dismal one.

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