What SHAKESPEARE really teaches us about how to listen | Prof Kent Lehnhof
What if ethics begins not with understanding… but with listening?
In this episode of The Scholar’s Armchair, I’m joined by Professor Kent Lehnhof to explore his book Voice and Ethics in Shakespeare’s Late Plays — a fascinating rethinking of how we relate to one another through literature, philosophy, and everyday life.
Drawing on the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas, Lehnhof argues that Shakespeare’s plays are not just about misunderstanding or miscommunication, but about something more fundamental: our failure to truly hear one another. Moving beyond the traditional focus on sight and interpretation, this conversation explores the ethical power of the human voice — not just what is said, but the act of speaking and listening itself.
Through plays like King Lear, Pericles, The Winter’s Tale, and The Tempest, we examine how voices can dominate, deceive, disrupt, and ultimately restore human connection. From the collapse of language in tragedy to the redemptive power of listening in Shakespeare’s late romances, this interview uncovers a quietly radical idea:
👉 Ethics begins in the ear, not the eye.
This episode will change the way you think about Shakespeare — and perhaps the way you listen to others.
Topics discussed include:
Why listening is central to ethical life
William Shakespeare and the power of voice in drama
Levinas, responsibility, and the encounter with the Other
The breakdown of language in King Lear
The redemptive voice in Pericles
Paulina and the ethics of difficult speech in The Winter’s Tale
Voice, power, and colonialism in The Tempest
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Links:
Kent's book Voice and Ethics in Shakespeare's Late Plays: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/voice-and-ethics-in-shakespeares-late-plays/FEC6657771A30ED5A765AD89AE37C4A2
Kent's profile page: https://www.chapman.edu/our-faculty/kent-lehnhof.aspx
🎧 Available on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts