Do you read Shakespeare for fun?:
About.com has a simple poll up, do you read Shakespeare for fun, yes or no. Right now it’s just about 50/50, with Yes edging out No 51% to 48%. So go stuff that ballot box!
Technorati Tags: Shakespeare
Shakespeare makes life better.
Do you read Shakespeare for fun?:
About.com has a simple poll up, do you read Shakespeare for fun, yes or no. Right now it’s just about 50/50, with Yes edging out No 51% to 48%. So go stuff that ballot box!
Technorati Tags: Shakespeare
I see that Alan, who just posted a comment or two, has a Shakespeare blog of his own called “Shakespeare Experience”. Cool. I particularly like the angle it takes: My reflections and thoughts on the works of William Shakespeare, how he inputs the world (dreadful way of putting it isn’t it?) and how my world reflects on and is reflected in his work.
Librivox is a great project that attempts to cross Project Gutenberg (the world of public domain literature) with audio books by getting volunteers to read the classics. How does Shakespeare fit in?
Technorati Tags: podcast, podcast review, Shakespeare
Dead White Males: Here’s a neat little podcast worth recommending. It’s not specifically Shakespeare, but “Dead White Males” is produced by Eric Jean, a literature student who is “considering teaching this stuff some day.” I listened to him do just under an hour on Merchant of Venice, which was pretty cool. Mostly a plot summary, but also some commentary on the characters, as well as readings of key passages.
This is not a Shakespeare only podcast, though, so I can only hope that he covers my favorite subject frequently enough that I don’t end up dropping him off my list. Other authors currently mentioned on his homepage include Alfred Lord Tennyson, William Blake, Thomas Hardy and others.
Technorati Tags: podcast, podcast review, Shakespeare
Shakespeare’s Standard Biography Could Shatter into “A Million Little Pieces”: I suppose this is a logical thing to expect after the whole Oprah / James Frey fiasco. The Oxford Society issues a press release saying that all existing Shakespeare biographies are fiction.
Keeping in mind, of course, that the whole purpose of the Oxford Society is to basically claim that Edward de Vere, the Earl of Oxford, is the real author of the complete works.
Technorati Tags: a million little pieces, Shakespeare