Skip to Content

Central College

  • Sign in to your Merit page
« Back to Recent News

Central College's Walter Cannon Co-Edits Second Book of Auditory Shakespeare

by Central College

Pella, IA (01/11/2021) — Walter Cannon, professor emeritus of English at Central College, has co-edited a new book titled "Shakespeare's Auditory Worlds: Hearing and Staging Practices, Then and Now."

Inspired by all that can be heard by audiences both on and off Shakespeare's stages, "Shakespeare's Auditory Worlds" breaks new ground by exploring complex relationships between sound and sight, dialogue and blocking, dialects and other languages, re-voicings and nonverbal relationships essential to noise, sounds and music.

The book features a virtual round-table discussion with six actors from the American Shakespeare Center, who have extensive experience with the world's first recreation of Shakespeare's indoor theater - Blackfriars Playhouse located in Staunton, Virginia. The actors discuss their nuanced hearing experiences on stage, inviting readers to understand the multiple dimensions of Shakespeare's auditory world.

"Shakespeare has kept me alive the way it has kept all of us alive," Cannon says. "I know it's difficult to do theatre these days, but you can find some friends, social distance or Zoom, and take turns reading a play out loud. The words need to be heard. I am so pleased to have this second volume arrive, making connections in these times of isolation."

This is the second book Cannon has co-edited with Laury Magnus, the first being "Who Hears in Shakespeare?: Auditory Worlds on Stage and Screen," published in 2011. Both books are part of Fairleigh Dickinson University Press' "Shakespeare and the Stage" series.

Cannon became professor emeritus of English in 2016 after 37 years of contributions to college initiatives and classroom teaching at Central. He has been recognized with both campus awards and invited participation in national and international workshops and institutes, including work at the American Shakespeare Center and the Shakespeare Institute, Stratford-upon-Avon, England; the British and Folger Shakespeare Libraries; and Yeats Summer School in Ireland. His poems, essays and reviews have appeared in a variety of journals and books, including "Nimrod," "The Blue Earth Review," "Mid-America Poetry Review" and "The Upstart Crow."

Central College of Pella, Iowa, is a private, four-year liberal arts college. Central is known for its academic rigor, leadership and character development, global experiential learning, STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) and sustainability education, athletics and service. For more information about Central College: www.central.edu.

Media Attachments

“Shakespeare’s Auditory Worlds: Hearing and Staging Practices, Then and Now”

Central College

Jeff Bersch (641) 628-5282, berschj@central.edu

Share this Story

  • Print
  • Email

Recent News

  • Central RED Launches Fall Semester Program Schedule
  • Central College Realigns Advancement Staff to Support "A World of Good" Campaign
  • Central Chemistry Professors Publish Laboratory Curriculum
  • Central College Soars to Unprecedented Heights with Record-Shattering $17.7 Million Fundraising Year!
  • Central's Top Scholars for 2025-26 Awarded
  • Central Announces Consolidated Operations Plan and Promotions
  • Central College Earns Silver in CASE Circle of Excellence Awards
  • Central College Board of Trustees Welcomes New Leaders
  • Central College Professor Abby Rocha Publishes Research on How Teachers Learn Math
  • Lois Kuyper-Rushing '77 Receives Fulbright U.S. Scholar Award
… View all recent news
Copyright © 2025 Merit Pages, Inc. • All Rights Reserved. • Terms of Service • Privacy Policy • Opt Out