Episodes
Richard Wilson discusses “‘Thˆe lean, unwashed artišcer’: Shakespeare’s Missing Magna Carta”. Wilson is Professor of Shakespeare Studies at Kingston University. This talk was included in the session titled, “Citizen Skepticism and Political Agency”.
Published 11/15/14
Thomas Cartelli discusses “ˆThe Speaking Silence of Citizens in Shakespeare’s Richard III”. Cartelli is Professor of English and Film Studies at Muhlenberg College. This talk was included in the session titled, “Citizen Skepticism and Political Agency”.
Published 11/15/14
Chris Fitter discusses “‘As full of grief as age’: Geriatric Poverty, the Poor Law, and King Lear”. Fitter is Professor of English at Rutgers University, Camden. This talk was included in the session titled, “Shakespeare and Tudor Institutional Change”.
Published 11/15/14
Paola Pugliatti discusses “Shakespeare and the ‘Military Revolution’: ˆThe Social and Cultural Weapons of Reformed War”. Pugliatti is Professor of English at the University of Florence, Italy. This talk was included in the session titled, “Shakespeare and Tudor Institutional Change”.
Published 11/15/14
Frances E. Dolan discusses “‘Know your food’: Titus Andronicus and the Local”. Dolan is Distinguished Professor of English at the University of California, Davis. This talk was included in the session titled, “Women, Labor, and Food Production”.
Published 11/15/14
Andy Wood discusses “‘Brave minds and hard hands’: Drama and Social Relations in the Hungry 1590’s”. Wood is Professor of Social History at Durham University. This talk was included in the session titled, “Class Rebellion in Henry VI Part Two”.
Published 11/14/14
Stephen Longstaffe discusses “The Plebeians Revise the Uprising: What the Actors Made of Shakespeare’s Jack Cade”. Longstaffe is Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Cumbria, UK. This talk was included in the session titled, “Class Rebellion in Henry VI Part Two”.
Published 11/14/14
David Rollison discusses “Shakespeare’s Overview: Did He Have Any Theory of English Historical Development?”. Rollison is the Honorary Research Associate of History at the University of Sydney. This talk was included in the session titled, “Conceptualizing Commoners and Social Struggle”.
Published 11/14/14
Markku Peltonnen discusses “Popularity and the Arts of Rhetoric: Julius Caesar in Context”. Peltonnen is History Faculty at the University of Helsinki. This talk was included in the session titled, “Popularity and Popular Politics in Early Modern England”.
Published 11/14/14
Peter Lake discusses “Popularity and its Discontents: Staging Politics on the Shakespearean Stage”. Lake is Distinguished Professor of History at Vanderbilt University. This talk was included in the session titled, “Popularity and Popular Politics in Early Modern England”.
Published 11/14/14
Steve Hindle welcomes participants and attendees to the “Rethinking Shakespeare in the Social Depths of Politics” conference, held at the Huntington Library on April 17-18, 2015. Hindle is the W. M. Keck Foundation Director of Research at The Huntington.
Published 11/14/14
Chris Fitter begins the event with opening remarks at the “Rethinking Shakespeare in the Social Depths of Politics” conference, held at the Huntington Library on April 17-18, 2015. Fitter is Professor of English at Rutgers University, Camden.
Published 11/14/14