William Shakespeare
How William Shakespeare (1564-1616), son of a provincial glover, became the world's most famous literary icon, is a story that's been told many times. Our appetite for biographies of Shakespeare is apparently insatiable: new lives of Shakespeare are always being written, as if we are still trying to find the key to understand the operation of his genius and the source of his literary immortality. This Great Writers theme focuses on the works themselves, with lectures, ebooks, and supporting material to find new angles and sources of critical analysis and enjoyment.
The biographical facts of Shakespeare's life can be easily recounted. He was born in Stratford-upon-Avon, a market town in the English midlands, in 1564: his father was a glover. We know little about his education but he almost certainly attended the town grammar school where he would have learned the standard Latin literary and rhetorical curriculum: we see some Elizabethan classroom staples in The Merry Wives of Windsor. There is no record of Shakespeare having attended university. He married Anne Hathaway in 1582, and their daughter Susanna was born in 1583, followed by twins Hamnet and Judith in…
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| # | Resource Title | Description | Contributor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 101 | On 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' | This essay on Shakespeare's play 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' is by Arthur Machen, and forms chapter… | |
| 102 | Shakespeare, Bacon and the Great Unknown | 'Shakespeare, Bacon and the Great Unknown' by the literary critic Andrew Lang. | |
| 103 | 'Spenser, Jonson, and Shakespeare' | Chapter taken from Issac Disraeli's collection of essay entitled 'Curiosities of Literature', first… | |
| 104 | Why Shakespeare Was Shakespeare | Since the release of the film 'Anonymous' in 2011, the odds have increased dramatically of being… | Kate O'Connor |
| 105 | The Sonnets | ||
| 106 | Second Globe Theatre | Globe Theatre - second Globe Theatre, from Hollar's View of London (1647). The Project Gutenberg… | |
| 107 | Elizabethan and Jacobean Theatres | Elizabethan and Jacobean London contained a myriad of playhouses, indoors and outdoors. What… | Kate O'Connor |
| 108 | Shakespeare, 'The Tempest' and its City Connections | Pdf-transcript of lecture by Professor David Daniell held on Monday, 13 February 1995 - 1:00pm at… | David Daniell |
| 109 | Science of Shakespeare (visualisations) | Diagrams (static and moving) showing various ways of illustrating speaker turns, speech lengths,… | Patrick Lockley |
| 110 | The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark |