Shakespeare and Friends
Darren and Rachel discuss whether or not Shakespeare understood geography and how likely was it that he traveled. Plays discussed include Midsummer Night's Dream, A Winter's Tale, As you like it, Tempest, Hamlet, Twelfth Night and Romeo and Juliet.Darren's recommendationsMap of Early Modern London https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/ELEP1.htmShakespeare and the Mediterranean, edited by Tom Clayton, Susan Brock, and Vicente Forés (Newark, DE: University of Delaware Press, 2004).Paul Brown, ‘“This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine”: The Tempest and the Discourse of Colonialism’, in Political Shakespeare: Essays in Cultural Materialism, edited by Jonathan Dollimore and Alan Sinfield (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1985), pp. 48-71.Rachel's recommendationsBrotton, Jerry. This Orient Isle: Elizabethan England and the Islamic World. Published in the US as The Sultan and the Queen: The Untold Story of Elizabeth and Islam. Viking, 2016.Dustagheer, Sarah. Shakespeare and London: A Dictionary. The Arden Shakespeare, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021.Klapště, Jan. The Czech Lands in Medieval Transformation. Translated by [translator name if known], East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 450–1450, vol. 17, Brill, 2012.Lockhart, Paul Douglas. Denmark, 1513–1660: The Rise and Decline of a Renaissance Monarchy. Oxford UP, 2007.Aanstad, Rachel The Influences Behind Shakespeare's Plays Forthcoming Pen and Sword 2027
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