Holderness published the first full-length Marxist study of
D. H. Lawrence,
D. H. Lawrence: History, Ideology and Fiction (Macmillan, 1982). A pioneer of "cultural Materialism", Holderness demonstrates "an interest in historical cultural change by evaluating contemporary television and film versions of Shakespeare's plays or by examining the image of Shakespeare fostered by our British educational system." In doing so, he seeks to counter "conservative views of early post-Second World War theatres and academics and to raise awareness that all textual appropriation and examination have a political dimension." He has published pioneering studies in Arabic adaptations of Shakespeare, culminating in
The Arab Shakespeare Trilogy by Sulayman Al Bassam (Methuen Drama, 2014), and research in Christian literature and theology, in journals such as
Harvard Theological Review,
Journal for the Study of the New Testament,
Literature and Theology, and
Renaissance and Reformation. Graham Holderness is also a novelist, poet and dramatist. His novel
The Prince of Denmark was published in 2001; his poetry collection Craeft received a Poetry Book Society award in 2002; and his play
Wholly Writ was in 2011 performed at Shakespeare's Globe, and by Royal Shakespeare Company actors in Stratford-upon-Avon. His more recent work has pioneered methods of critical-creative writing, exemplified by his innovative factual-fictional biography
Nine Lives of William Shakespeare (Bloomsbury/Arden Shakespeare, 2011), which pairs critical chapters on biographical themes, with short stories on the same topic, written in styles as diverse as those of Dan Brown and Arthur Conan Doyle, Ernest Hemingway and Jonathan Swift. Extending these methods, and published in 2014, are
Tales from Shakespeare: Creative Collisions (Cambridge University Press, June 2014), which includes a story about Shakespeare's Richard II being performed on board the ship the Red Dragon during the Third Voyage of the East India Company, and a re-writing of
Coriolanus as a James Bond adventure; and
Re-writing Jesus: Christ in 20th Century Fiction and Film (Bloomsbury, November 2014), which incorporates a new historical life of Jesus,
Ecce Homo. May 2014 sees the publication of a historical fantasy novel on Shakespeare and the Gunpowder Plot,
Black and Deep Desires: William Shakespeare Vampire Hunter (Top Hat Books, 2014). His most recent book is
The Faith of William Shakespeare (Lion Hudson, November 2016). ==Positions==