ABSTRACT

Renowned literary scholar Linda Hutcheon explores the ubiquity of adaptations in all their various media incarnations and challenges their constant critical denigration. Adaptation, Hutcheon argues, has always been a central mode of the story-telling imagination and deserves to be studied in all its breadth and range as both a process (of creation and reception) and a product unto its own.

Persuasive and illuminating, A Theory of Adaptation is a bold rethinking of how adaptation works across all media and genres that may put an end to the age-old question of whether the book was better than the movie, or the opera, or the theme park.

chapter 2|46 pages

WHAT? (Forms)

chapter 3|34 pages

WHO? WHY? (Adapters)

chapter 4|28 pages

HOW? (Audiences)

chapter 5|28 pages

WHERE? WHEN? (Contexts)

chapter 6|10 pages

FINAL QUESTIONS