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Abstract
This is the second issue of the eighth volume of _Borrowers and Lenders_. DiPasquale, Theresa M. _Shakespeare and the Ali'i Nui_; Carroll, William C. _The Fiendlike Queen: Recuperating Lady Macbeth in Contemporary Adaptations of Macbeth_; Lefait, Sébastien _"This same strict and most observant watch" (1.1.71): Gregory Doran's Hamlet as Surveillance Adaptation_; Sturgess, Kim C. _A Republican Dream? — Americans Question Shakespeare_; Jensen, Michael P._"What service is here?" Exploring Service Shakespeare_; Ko, Yu Jin _Macbeth Behind Bars_; Schwartz-Gastine, Isabelle _Performing A Midsummer Night's Dream with the Homeless (and Others) in Paris_; Cavanagh, Sheila T. _"The World's Common Place": Leveling the Shakespearean Playing Field_; Bahr, Michael _The Utah Shakespeare Festival / Southern Utah University Annual Shakespeare Competition_; Weingust, Don _The Utah Shakespeare Festival / Southern Utah University Annual Shakespeare Competition_; Amberg, Jim _"Teach him how to tell my story": Access at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival_; Jensen, Michael P. _"You speak all your part at once, cues and all": Reading Shakespeare with Alzheimer's Disease_; Ridden, Geoffrey M. _The Bard's Speech: Making it Better; Shakespeare and Therapy in Film_; Reid, Pauline _Review of Spectral Shakespeares: Media Adaptations in the Twenty-First Century, by Maurizio Calbi_.
Borrowers and Lenders: The Journal of Shakespeare and Appropriation is a peer-reviewed, online, born-digital, multimedia journal that welcomes original scholarship engaging with the afterlives of Shakespearean texts and their literary, filmic, multimedia, and critical histories. It encourages contributors to use the online format to its best advantage, in particular, by imagining how to enhance or illustrate their essays with multimedia (screen captures, sound clips, images, and so on). B&L won the CELJ's "Best New Journal" Award in 2007. B&L is fully indexed in the MLA Bibliography and the World Shakespeare Bibliography. The journal was founded in 2005 by Christy Desmet and Sujata Iyengar of the English Department at the University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA.
Borrowers and Lenders: The Journal of Shakespeare and Appropriation is a peer-reviewed, online, born-digital, multimedia journal that welcomes original scholarship engaging with the afterlives of Shakespearean texts and their literary, filmic, multimedia, and critical histories. It encourages contributors to use the online format to its best advantage, in particular, by imagining how to enhance or illustrate their essays with multimedia (screen captures, sound clips, images, and so on). B&L won the CELJ's "Best New Journal" Award in 2007. B&L is fully indexed in the MLA Bibliography and the World Shakespeare Bibliography. The journal was founded in 2005 by Christy Desmet and Sujata Iyengar of the English Department at the University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA.