Hugh Macrae Richmond

Title: 
Emeritus
Biography: 

My current activity in research and teaching is chiefly concerned with the history of Shakespeare performance, as reflected in  Shakespeare's Theatre: a Dictionary of His Stage Context (Continuum International, 2002, 2004, and on the internet by Credo Reference) and in the website at:  http://shakespearestaging.berkeley.edu This website has just (August  2016) been thoroughl;y revised and restructured. My full personal bibliography can be found on that site Similar updating has been completed in the site devoted to performances of John Miltonat  http://miltonrevealed.berkeley.edu Recently some of this material has been consolidated into a book entitled Shakespeare's Tragedies Reviewed: a Spectator's Role, published by Peter Lang on August 30  2015. Peter Lang also published in February 2018 an anthology of my Shakespeare essays over the last fifty years under the title Shakespeare Relocated: Studies in Historical Psychology. Fuller versions of my recent research can be found in my entry on the site academia.edu.  I continue to teach regularly for the UCB Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, most recently on Milton, Shakespeare, and modern drama (2016, 2018) Several of my books have recently been reprinted or reviewed up to fifty years after publication, such as The School of Love and Renaissance Landscapes.See also the review of Shakespeare's Sexual Comedy, below,

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In 2020 Hugh Macrae Richmond received the Edward A. Dickson Emeriti Professorship for distinguished service to the campus. The award  is supported by an endowment from Edward A. Dickson, a former Regent of the University. The Professorship is awarded annually to an emeritus faculty member who has an outstanding record of post-retirement contributions in teaching, research, and public or University service.

Current Research: 

I am currently working on upgrading our website at Shakespeare's Staging by the addition of digitalized versions of the recordings of our forty productions of plays by Shakespeare, Milton, Webster, Calderon, etc., hitherto available fragmentarily on YouTube. This process will be aided by the award of a Edward Dickson Emeriti Professorship for distinguished service to the University.

Books

Hugh Macrae Richmond
Monograph, 2017
Hugh Macrae Richmond
Monograph, 2015
Hugh Macrae Richmond
Monograph, 1971

Selected Publications

“Shakespeare’s Navarre” in Shakespeare Criticism (Gale), vol. 137 (2011), 254-316

 “Paradise Lost as Oral Epic,” in Approaches to Teaching Milton's Paradise Lost,  Second Edition.  Editor: Peter C. Herman. New York:  Modern Languages Association, 2012, pp. 192-6.

"Romeo and Juliet: Shakespeare vs. Lope de Vega," Shakespeare Newsletter, 61.3 (Winter, 2012), pp. 81, 92, 116-7. [Originally presented at I.S.A., Prague, 2011]

"Shakespeare in Performance," Shakespeare Forum (UCB English Ug. Soc.) Maude Fife Room, 19 April, 2014.

“Challenges and Rewards for Digital Humanities” World Shakespeare Congress. Stratford & London (Globe Playhouse & London University) 6 August, 3.45-5.15, 2016.

"Guide to Internet Resources: Teaching Shakespeare's Hisrtories Using the Internet."  Approaches to Teaching Shakespeare's History Plays. Ed. Laurie Ellinghausen, New Yok. MLA, 2017. Pp.205-11.

“Milton for Millenials: Sponsoring Digital Creativity” in Digital Milton ed. David Currell, Palgrave Macmillan, 2018, pp 225-42.

Shakespeare's Tragedies: a Spectator’s Role, New York: Peter Lang,         8/30/15: from web-site at shakespearestaging.berkeley.edu

Shakespeare Relocated: Studies in Historical Psychology. New York: Peter Lang, 2018.

Contact

(510) 843-7528
237 Wheeler