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This book follows the many echoes of Jean Racine's oeuvre across Europe, from courts to schools to other arts, opening up vistas for further exploration across cultural and political borders.
«John Sayer is a superb guide, always informed and always courteous, as he leads us on a tour of the courts, theatres, schools and publishing houses of Europe to which Racine was, for a good two centuries after his death, an abiding source of inspiration and also a touchstone by which changing tastes and preferences could repeatedly be assessed. Sayer's study not only sheds light on the reception of Racine's most celebrated tragedies but allows room for consideration of his lesser known works, and Sayer interests himself also in the comparative neglect, and the reasons for it, suffered periodically by such works as Bérénice. Sayer picks up echoes of Racine in a multitude and a variety of places which encompass translations, biographies, textbooks, operas and other adaptations. He always trains a wise and critical ear to these resonances and, in the process, leaves us in no doubt as to the stature of Racine as both a French writer par excellence and a genius central to the prestigious but self-questioning culture of Europe throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.» (Dr John Leigh, Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge)
CONTENTS: Impact and Echoes across Europe - The Play of Politics - Of Publishing and Powers - Theatre sans Frontieres - Translated, Adapted, Borrowed - Musical Settings - Artists and Icons - Suited for Study and Schooling - Racine and Amateur Theatricals - Echoes of Each Play - Lives of Racine after Racine.
John Sayer is an Honorary Professor at Perm in the Russian Federation, and literary biographer of Racine and of Shakespeare's German translator Wolf Graf von Baudissin. He has carried Racine through a long career as a leading educator, author, editor and active developer of education policies for the future Europe. Teaching in schools, then for two decades prominent as a school and profession leader, champion of the ill-fated General Teaching Council project, head of the Education Management Unit at the University of London, then tutor and research fellow at the University of Oxford, from there he has directed successive EU Tempus inter-university projects for Eastern Europe.