The Magic of Shakespeare
This lecture will celebrate Shakespeare's immortality on the exact 400th anniversary of his burial. It will begin from Theseus' famous speech in A Midsummer Night's Dream about the magical, transformative power of poetry.
It will argue that Shakespeare inherited from antiquity a fascination with the intimate association between erotic love, magic and the creative imagination, and that this is one of the keys to the enduring power of his plays.
Sir Jonathan Bate, Provost of Worcester College and Professor of English Literature at Oxford University, is one of the world's most renowned Shakespeare scholars, the author of, among many other works, Shakespeare and Ovid, The Genius of Shakespeare, Soul of the Age and (as co-editor) The RSC Shakespeare: Complete Works. He co-curated Shakespeare Staging the World, the British Museum's exhibition for the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad, and he is the author of Being Shakespeare: A One-Man Play for Simon Callow, which has toured nationally and internationally and had three runs in the West End.
Date Published:
1 March 2019
Writer:
Source:
Contributors:
Jonathan Bate
In Collection(s):
William Shakespeare
Keywords:
shakespeare, literature, theatre, The Tempest, A Midsummer Night's Dream
Cite:
The Magic of Shakespeare by William Shakespeare at https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/ via https://dev.writersinspire.it.ox.ac.uk/content/magic-shakespeare. Published on 01 March 2019. Accessed on 14 May 2026.
If reusing this resource please attribute as follows: The Magic of Shakespeare (https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/) by William Shakespeare, licensed as Creative Commons BY-NC-SA (2.0 UK).
Related content: