Googled Julian Bowsher and came across list of his publications.
Title: Archaeology of Intellectual aspects of European Culture : a volume of articles based on the project of International Collaborative research / edited by Kazutaka Tanaka and Masahiro Imai.
Created/Published: Hirosaki University Press, 2012.
Title: The playhouses: Archaeology and after
Author(s): Gurr, Andrew
Source: SHAKESPEARE Volume: 7 Issue: 4 Special Issue: SI Pages: 400-412 DOI: 10.1080/17450918.2011.625441 Published: 2011
Cited References: 15Selected References: 15
"of the University of York, UK, this four-volume collection brings together the
essential Anglophone literature of heritage studies. Encompassing both
contemporary material and material of historical significance from the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the collection is explicitly
interdisciplinary, with research drawn not only from the three disciplines of
archaeology, architecture and history traditionally associated with material
heritage, but also from subjects such as geography, anthropology, museology,
sociology, cultural studies, performance studies and tourism studies. As an
emerging field of academic enquiry, the sheer scale of the growth in research
output in heritage studies makes this collection especially timely"
Review of Book by Ray B. Browne (2008)
Kohl, P. L., Kozelsky, M., and Ben-Yehuda, N. (eds.) (2007). Selective Remembrances: Archaeology in the
Construction, Commemoration, and Consecration of National Pasts, Chicago University Press,
Chicago.
Director of the British Museum, Neil MacGregor new series on Radio 4 which explores the world of William Shakespeare through a selection of objects from the time. From March 2012.
Julian Bowsher, Senior Archaeologist, Museum of London Archaeology
The Museum's latest exhibition, Shakespeare: staging the world, provides a fascinating insight into the early modern world, seen through the lens of Shakespeare's plays. This exhibition book links historical objects and works of art with Shakespeare's texts to reveal how the playwright informed his audiences of the major events and political issues of the day: a sixteenth- century dagger fished from the Thames gives new significance to the gang violence of Romeo and Juliet; Henry V's saddle, helm and shield recall the depiction of war in the history plays; Guy Fawkes' lantern illustrates the failed gunpowder plot, later to prove the inspiration for Macbeth.
The authors: Jonathan Bate is Provost of Worcester College Oxford and formerly Professor of Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature at the University of Warwick. He is an internationally acclaimed author and editor, with titles including Soul of Age: the Life, Mind and Works of William Shakespeare. Dora Thornton is curator of Renaissance Europe at the British Museum and author of many titles, including The Scholar in His Study: Ownership and Experience in Renaissance Italy.
Published to accompany a major exhibition at the British museum (19 July – 25 November 2012), part of the Cultural Olympiad and the World Shakespeare festival.
Main title Shakespeare's London : everyday life in London, 1580-1616 / Stephen Porter.
Published/Created Stroud, Gloucestershire : Amberley, 2011.
Shakespeare
Alabama Shakespeare Festival - Montgomery
Chicago Shakespeare Theater
Colorado Shakespeare Festival - Boulder
Complete Works of William Shakespeare - Jeremy Hylton, MIT
Folger Shakespeare Library - Washington, DC. Provides access to Hamnet, the library's online catalog.
Furness Shakespeare Library - Collection of primary and secondary sources, including both texts and images, that illuminate the theater, literature, and history of Shakespeare, Shakespearean texts, theatrical production, and criticism made available by the Schoenberg Center for Electronic Text and Image (SCETI) at the University of Pennsylvania. Browsable and searchable, the project provides digital facsimiles of many of Shakespeare's plays.
Mr. William Shakespeare and the Internet - Terry A. Gray
Oxford Shakespeare - 1914 Oxford edition, edited by W. J. Craig of the Complete Works of William Shakespeare with the text of 37 plays, 154 sonnets and miscellaneous verse. Fully searchable. From Bartleby.com.
Public Theater / New York Shakespeare Festival - Founded by Joseph Papp.
Renascence Editions: Works Printed in English, 1477-1799 - Richard Bear, University of Oregon. Includes 37 plays of Shakespeare.
Royal Shakespeare Company - Stratford-upon-Avon
Shakespeare's Globe
Shakespeare Mystery - Argument over the authorship of Shakespeare is the subject of this PBS Frontline broadcast. Site offers seven full-text articles.
Shakespeare Oxford Society - Seeks to "document and establish Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford as the universally recognised author of the works of William Shakespeare."
Shakespeare Resources - Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia
Shakespeare's Stratford on the Web - Stratford-Upon-Avon, U.K.
Stratford Festival of Canada - Ontario, Canada theatre festival runs from May to November.
Description
Edited by Gabriella Giannachi, Nick Kaye, Michael Shanks
Published 12th April 2012 by Routledge – 286 pages
Archaeologies of Presence is a brilliant exploration of how the performance of presence can be understood through the relationships between performance theory and archaeological thinking. Drawing together carefully commissioned contributions by leading international scholars and artists, this radical new work poses a number of essential questions:
* What are the principle signifiers of theatrical presence?
* How is presence achieved through theatrical performance?
* What makes a memory come alive and live again?
* How is presence connected with identity?
* Is presence synonymous with 'being in the moment'?
* What is the nature of the ‘co-presence’ of audience and performer?
* Where does performance practice end and its documentation begin?
Co-edited by performance specialists Gabriella Giannachi and Nick Kaye, and archaeologist Michael Shanks, Archaeologies of Presence represents an innovative and rewarding feat of interdisciplinary scholarship.