The Free Press Journal

SHAKESPEAR­E’S INFLUENCE ON SOUTH-ASIAN COUNTRIES

- AGENCIES

A new exhibition in the UK is offering a glimpse of William Shakespear­e’s influence on eight South Asian countries, including India, and the bard’s enduring influence on the cultures and lives of the people.

The Shakespear­e Birthplace Trust is organising the exhibition, which will be on till September 8, in collaborat­ion with Birmingham City University in the UK.

The exhibition takes visitors on a visual tour of each of the eight countries that make up South Asia (India, Pakistan, Afghanista­n, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal and Sri Lanka) offering an intriguing snapshot into each country’s relationsh­ip with Shakespear­e and how they have made him part of their own evolving history.

“Shakespear­e’s works have a long and complex relationsh­ip with South Asia, a relationsh­ip which has sometimes been tested by the colonial context but which has been the root of extraordin­ary artistic and intellectu­al energy,” Elizabeth Dollimore, from the Shakespear­e Birthplace Trust, said.

“The exhibition will explore William Shakespear­e as the internatio­nal figure who crossed borders and explored issues that are relevant even today,” said Dollimore.

Visitors can listen to original music composed by artists including beat-boxer Jason Singh, Ranjana Ghatak and composer Mathew Forbes, each taking inspiratio­n from Shakespear­e’s works with an Asian twist.

Musicians from the Birmingham Conservato­ire will also explore the relationsh­ips

between Shakespear­e and India in ‘My Heavenly Jewel,’ a classical piece inspired by Shakespear­ian and modern Indian romance.

“This exhibition does not just showcase Shakespear­e’s reach, but also tells us that different cultures around the world can interpret and use Shakespear­e in ways we might not expect,” said Islam Issa, from Birmingham City University.

Given the overarchin­g contexts of British colonialis­m and influence in the region, it has been interestin­g to see the different ways in which performanc­es in South Asia serve different purposes, from cultural to social to political.

In celebratio­n of South Asian music, the Trust has commission­ed seven new musical compositio­ns inspired by Shakespear­e to complement the exhibition.

The works cover a wide range of genres, some influenced by South Asia, and others with their roots in contempora­ry UK culture.

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 ??  ?? The exhibition takes visitors on a visual tour of each of the eight South Asian countries offering an intriguing snapshot into each country’s relationsh­ip with Shakespear­e and how they have made him part of their own evolving history.
The exhibition takes visitors on a visual tour of each of the eight South Asian countries offering an intriguing snapshot into each country’s relationsh­ip with Shakespear­e and how they have made him part of their own evolving history.

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