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Publications

  • Richard Burt, Professor of Loser Theory, has delivered invited papers at sessions of the Modern Language Association (1989, 1991, 2003, 2008, 2012, 2016), the VII, VIII, IX, and X World Shakespeare Congresses in Valencia, Spain in 2002, Brisbane, Australia in 2006Prague, in the Czech Republic in July 17 – 22, 2011, and in Stratford-Upon-Avon and London, July 31-August 5, 2016.

    Burt will be a keynote speaker, delivering three lectures at the 2nd Annual Shakespeare Swan Lectures Sponsored by CSS (Chongqing Shakespeare Society) & Center for Shakespeare Studies Southwest University, Chongqing, China April 15-19, 2019 and a fourth lecture at Hangzhou Normal University on April 21, 2019. Burt delivered “Posthumous Shakespeare: The Mourning After” at the Rose Theater, Kingston College London conference on “Infinite Jest: Shakespeare Afterlives” on March 11, 2018, at the invitation of of Richard Wilson.

    Burt spoke on “What the Dead Said: Posthumography and the Public Sphere” at the UCI Forum for the Academy and the Public in January 22-24, 2016 at the invitation of Amy Wilentz and on “MacDeth” at the HUDSON STRODE RENAISSANCE STUDIES SYMPOSIUM entitled “Why Isn’t Shakespeare Dead?” at the University of Alabama, February 27-28, 2016. Burt also delivered a plenary paper on Orson Welles’ Filming Othello at Shakespeare: the Next 400 years” in Kronborg Castle, Elsisnore, Denmark, April 22-24, 2016.

    Burt has delivered plenary lectures and invited papers at the Japan Shakespeare Society (October 10-11, 2015); George Washington University (2014); “Robinson Crusoe in Asia,” Tsukuba University, Tokyo, September 19-21, 2014; the University of the Philippines (2013); Wuhan University, China (2013); Tsukuba University, Tokyo (2012); Donghai University, Shanghai, China (2011); Central Taiwan University (2009) and National Taiwan University (2009 and 2014); the Shakespeare Association of America (2003 and 2008); the British Museum (2008); the ACLA (2008); and the Getty Research Center (1995).

    Burt has also delivered invited papers at numerous colleges and universities, including Harvard University; Tufts University; New York University; Amherst College (Department of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought); the University of Michigan; the Free University in Berlin; the University of Jena; the University of Tübingen; the University of Morocco; the University of Rouen; the University of Kansas; the University of Reading; the University of Durham; Birbeck University, London; the University of Warwick; U.C. Irvine; the University of Lodz, Poland; the University of Alabama’s Hudson Strode Lecture Series (2004; 2005; eventually, February 2016); Columbia University; and Arizona State University.

  • Richard Burt was a founding member of the Asian Shakespeare Society.

Books

Authored

Co-Authored

  • What’s the Worst Thing You Can Do to Shakespeare? Julian Yates, co-author. (New York and London:  Palgrave Macmillan, 2013)

Forthcoming Books

  • Loser Theory I: An Exhibition of the Complete Footnotes, and More!
  • Orson Welles’s Cinemal d’archive and the Post -Faux-Pas-Calypse of Philm. Under contract with Punctum Press, Dead Letters Office Series
  • Yours Posthumously: The Metaphysics of Publication

Edited and Co-Edited Books

Shakespeares After Shakespeare: An Encyclopedia of the Bard in Mass Media and Popular Culture. 2 vol. Ed. Richard Burt (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006), viii; 862 pp.

  • Shakespeare, the Movie II:   Popularizing the Plays on Film, TV, Video and DVD. Ed. Richard Burt and Lynda Boose (New York and London:   Routledge Press, 2003), xi, 340 pp.
  • Shakespeare After Mass Media. Ed. Richard Burt (New York and London: Palgrave, 2002).
  • The Administration of Aesthetics: Censorship, Political Criticism, and the Public Sphere. Ed. Richard Burt (Minneapolis, MN:  U of Minnesota P, 1994), xxx, 386 pp.
  • Shakespeare, the Movie:   Popularizing the Plays on Film, TV, and Video. Ed. Lynda Boose and Richard Burt (New York and London:   Routledge Press, 1997), ix, 280 pp. Korean translation, 2001.
  • Enclosure Acts:   Sexuality, Property, and Culture in Early Modern England. Ed. Richard Burt and John Michael Archer. (Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1994), x, 340 pp.

Online Monograph

Chapters in Books

Articles in Journals

Co-Authored Articles

  • “What’s the Worst Thing You Can Do to Shak/x/espeare?” co-authored with Julian Yates, Renaissance Drama, n.s. 40 2012, 71-89.
  • “Certain Tendencies in Shakespeare Film Criticism,” co-authored with Scott Newstock, Shakespeare Studies Vol. 38, special Forum on “After Shakespeare on Film.” Ed. Gregory Semenza, 2010, 88-103.
  • “Suggested for Mature Readers: Deconstructing Shakespearean Value in Comic Books,” co-authored with Josh Heuman, forthcoming in Shakespeare After Mass Media. Ed. Richard Burt (New York: Palgrave, 2002), 150-71.
  • “Knowing Better: Sex, Cultural Criticism, and the Pedagogical Imperative in the 1990s,” co-authored with Jeffrey Wallen, Diacritics , “Texts / Contexts,” Spring 1999, 29 (1): 72-91.
  • “Totally Clueless?: Shakespeare Goes Hollywood in the 1990s,” co-authored with Lynda Boose, in Shakespeare, the Movie: Popularizing the Plays on Film, TV, and Video. (New York and London: Routledge Press, 1997), 8-22; reprinted in Timothy Corrigan, Ed. Film and Literature: An Introduction and Reader (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1999), 340-56; reprinted in Sarah McLanahan. Ed. Shaping Discourses: Readings for University Writers , South Bend, IN: U of Notre Dame P, 2001; reprinted in William Shakespeare. Ed. Laura Marve (Greehaven, 2003).

Book Introductions

  • “Shakespeare, the Movie, the Sequel: Popularizing the Plays on Film, Television, and DVD: Editors’ Cut,” in Shakespeare the Movie II. Ed. Richard Burt and Lynda E. Boose, (New York and London: Routledge Press, 2003), 1-13.
  • “To e- or not to e-? Schlockspeare in the Age of Electronic Mass Media,” in Shakespeare After Mass Media. Ed. Richard Burt (New York: Palgrave, 2002), 1-32.
  • “The ‘New’ Censorship,” in The Administration of Aesthetics: Censorship, Political Criticism, and the Public Sphere Ed. Richard Burt (Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1994), xi-xxix.

Co-Authored Book Introductions

  • “Shakespeare, the Movie.” Co-authored with Lynda Boose, in Shakespeare, the Movie: Popularizing the Plays on Film,TV, and Video (New York and London: Routledge Press, 1997), 1-7.
  • “Introduction,” co-authored with John Michael Archer, in Enclosure Acts: Sexuality, Property, and Culture in Early Modern England (Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1994), 1-13.

Media Coverage and Interviews

  • Interviewed by Mexican journalist Lucía Burbano on March 3, 2016 about Shakespeare and popular culture.
  • Interviewed by Ellen Lupton, columnist for the New York Times, and quoted in her blog July 13, 2010: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/12/how-to-lose-a-legacy/
  • Interviewed by NY Times reporter Celia McGee for a story on Stephen Greenblatt’s co-authored play Cardenio in April 2008. The story, “Shakespearean Brushes Up His Playwriting,” was published on May 4, 2008.
  • Interviewed by Time magazine journalist Jumana Farourky for a story she was writing on “The Shakespeare industry,” published in the March 27, 2006 international issue.
  • Interviewed by Sally Placksin, for MLA’s radio program,”What’s the Word?” on Al Pacino and Shakespeare. The interview took place on Wednesday, January 18, 2006 at 10:30am (EST).
  • Interviewed by Krissy Clark of “Weekend America” (airs on more than 100 NPR stations around the U.S.) for a show about Shakespeare’s Birthday, April 20, 2005.
  • Shakespeare, the Movie II profiled in UF Clasnotes, 2003.
  • Interviewed about “Shakespeare and America” on Chicago Public Radio’s Odyssey, April 29, 2003.
  • Interviewed by reporter David Glenn of the Chronicle of Higher Education for a “Hot Type” story on the fate of the UMass Press, July 7, 2003. The story ran July, 2003.
  • National Public Radio interview (Chicago syndicated show “Odysessy” with host Gretchen Helfrich) on “Shakespeare in America,” April 28, 2003.
  • Interviewed by Seattle Times reporter Misha Berson for a story on Shakespeare and business seminars. The story, “Once More into the Breach, Dear CEOs,” ran August 18, 2002.
  • January 2001, interviewed by reporter Andy Brown for an issue of Literary Cavalcade devoted to Shakespeare and mass culture.
  • Quoted and discussed in “The Pound of Flesh,” a story about Shakespeare pornography in Lingua Franca , Volume 11, No. 6 September 2001), 8-9. The story was reprinted on the front page of the London Independent newspaper on August 22, 2001.
  • Interviewed by, Jeet Heer, a reporter for the Toronto National Post , about Shakespeare and popular culture, August 14, 2001. The story ran on August 28, 2001.
  • June 14, 2000. Interviewed by a Brazilian newspaper journalist about Unspeakable ShaXXXspeares.
  • February 2000. Interviewed about Unspeakable ShaXXXspeares on GayBC radio, Seattle, Washington.
  • Interviewed by Scott Heller of The Chronicle of Higher Education in October 1998 about Unspeakable ShaXXXspeares for a “Hot Type” essay he wrote about both it and Harold Bloom’s Shakespeare and the Invention of the Human .
  • Reader for Routledge Press, Blackwell Press, Cornell University Press, Princeton University Press, St. Martin’s Press, University of Illinois Press, University of Minnesota Press, Wayne State University Press, Ashgate Press, AdaptationBorrowers and LendersPMLA, and Renaissance Quarterly.