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Shakespeare & Beyond

Shakespeare & Beyond

The Shakespeare & Beyond blog features a wide range of Shakespeare-related topics: the early modern period in which he lived, the ways his plays have been interpreted and staged over the past four centuries, the enduring power of his characters and language, and more.

Nathan the Wise: An 18th-century German counterpoint to Shakespeare’s Shylock
Nathan the Wise
Shakespeare and Beyond

Nathan the Wise: An 18th-century German counterpoint to Shakespeare’s Shylock

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Author
Michele Osherow

“Nathan the Wise” and “The Merchant of Venice” are very different works, though religious tension is a subject in each, as is the potential for love and loss, wealth and poverty, bloodshed and peace. But it is the character of…

Excerpt: 'Index, A History of the' by Dennis Duncan
incomplete handwritten index
Shakespeare and Beyond

Excerpt: 'Index, A History of the' by Dennis Duncan

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Shakespeare & Beyond

While doing research in the Folger collection, Dennis Duncan encountered hundreds of indexes created by early modern readers. In this excerpt from his newly published book, “Index, A History of the,” Duncan describes the fascinating variety of reader indexes he…

What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in March
Shakespeare and Beyond

What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in March

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Author
Ben Lauer

Take a look at what the Folger’s theater partners have on stage this March, including a long-awaited ‘Hamlet’ in Cincinnati, ‘Much Ado About Nothing’ in Atlanta, and ‘The Merchant of Venice,’ with John Douglas Thompson, coming to Washington, DC.

Actors taking on tyrants: Ernst Lubitsch’s 'To Be or Not to Be'
To Be or Not To Be film still
Shakespeare and Beyond

Actors taking on tyrants: Ernst Lubitsch’s 'To Be or Not to Be'

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Author
Austin Tichenor

A Polish acting troupe outwits the Nazis using Shakespeare codes and theatrical smarts in Ernst Lubitsch’s 1942 film “To Be or Not to Be,” an audacious comedy filmed as Hitler was devastating Europe. Almost the definition of a joke told…

Recipes for dealing with the plague in Shakespeare’s England
Burges's water for the plague
Shakespeare and Beyond

Recipes for dealing with the plague in Shakespeare’s England

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Author
Yann Ryan

Recipes for plague-curing potions like “Doctor Burges’s remedy” are often found in household recipe books of Shakespeare’s time. Folger fellow Yann Ryan writes about the circulation of information and misinformation through these recipes.

Quiz: Shakespeare characters that share the same name
The Comedy of Errors
Shakespeare and Beyond

Quiz: Shakespeare characters that share the same name

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Take the quiz to see if you can identify some of the Shakespeare characters who share names with characters in other plays.

The sanitized Shakespeare of Mary Lamb and Henrietta Bowdler - Excerpt: 'Shakespeare's Lady Editors' by Molly Yarn
Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare
Shakespeare and Beyond

The sanitized Shakespeare of Mary Lamb and Henrietta Bowdler - Excerpt: 'Shakespeare's Lady Editors' by Molly Yarn

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Shakespeare & Beyond

As anyone who has read Shakespeare’s plays can attest, their content is not always very appropriate for children: brutal murders, bawdy jokes, incest, etc. Editions of Shakespeare’s plays that have been designed specifically for children often omit or smooth over…

Is Shakespeare for everyone?
Shakespeare and Beyond

Is Shakespeare for everyone?

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Author
Austin Tichenor

Austin Tichenor makes the case for why we should say “Shakespeare is for anyone who wants him” instead of “Shakespeare is for everyone.”

The unlikely link between a sixth-century queen and Macbeth
The Dark Queens
Shakespeare and Beyond

The unlikely link between a sixth-century queen and Macbeth

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Shakespeare & Beyond

While working on a dual biography of Brunhild and Fredegund, Shelley Puhak stumbled across a connection between these medieval queens and Shakespeare.

Picturing early modern women athletes
Women racing gondolas
Shakespeare and Beyond

Picturing early modern women athletes

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Author
Peter Radford

Folger fellow Peter Radford explores the history of picturing women athletes from ancient Greece to early modern Europe, how these images can be hard to find and interpret, but also why they’re so valuable and compelling.

The evolution of American Moor: The Untitled Othello Project
Untitled Othello Project
Shakespeare and Beyond

The evolution of American Moor: The Untitled Othello Project

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Author
Keith Hamilton Cobb

Keith Hamilton Cobb reflects on his play American Moor and how the questions he received in response to it led to the development of the Untitled Othello Project, a deeply scrutinizing exploration of Shakespeare’s text.

Glimpses of women athletes in 18th-century England
Shakespeare and Beyond

Glimpses of women athletes in 18th-century England

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Author
Peter Radford

A Folger fellow and former Olympian shares images and stories of 18th-century women athletes in England who competed in races, fights, cricket matches, and more.

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