Showing posts with label Shakespeare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shakespeare. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Some Fun Things

I've used this time of working from home and social distancing to discover new fun things on the internet. Not everything out there is doom and gloom, there are actually some positive things that have appeared due to everyone being under some type of quarantine in order to stop the spread of this terrible virus.

Okay...enough with the depressing stuff, let's move on to the fun things!


First off, have you seen John Krasinski's YouTube episodes of Some Good News? They are fantastic. You probably know Krasinski from The Office, Jack Ryan, and as the director of A Quiet Place. He's also married to Mary Poppins....er, I mean Emily Blunt.

John has been gathering good news from around the world via Twitter and other social media channels and presenting short segments in the format of a news channel. I laughed. I cried. These are just fantastic. Episode 2 is just so amazing, it gave me goose bumps.  Click on the link to watch Some Good News.


Next up we have LeVar Burton of Roots, Star Trek: The Next Generation, and Reading Rainbow fame. He has launched a Twitter live stream of his podcast LeVar Burton Reads for all ages on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Here is his current schedule and you can follow him on Twitter at @LevarBurton:



  • Mondays for Children: 9:00 a.m. PT/12:00 p.m. ET
  • Wednesdays for YA: 3:00 p.m. PT/6:00 p.m. ET
  • Fridays for Adults: 6:00p.m. PT/9:00 p.m. ET
If you miss an episode, you can replay them on Twitter.


Speaking of Star Trek: The Next Generation cast members, how about Sir Patrick Stewart? Since Saturday, March 21, this incredibly talented, Oscar nominated actor has been treating people to a reading of one Shakespeare sonnet at day. Stewart had a long run with the Royal Shakespeare Company (1966-1982) so he is certainly qualified to read Shakespeare sonnets.

You can follow him on Twitter at @SirPatStew. As with LeVar Burton, if you miss a reading you can replay them on Twitter.

Authors Kevin Hearne and Delilah S. Dawson have a podcast called Ask the Bards in which they talk about many aspects of writing. The first episode came out on February 23, and they have continued to produce episodes. Kevin Hearne is very much into craft cocktails and birds, so if you have interest in either of those things you can follow him on Twitter at @KevinHearne.

Author Veronica Roth has a Twitch channel and during the month of April she is partnering with other authors to talk about writing, publishing, and other topics. 

Do you have a favorite author, artist, musician, or entertainer? Chances are they have started putting free, entertaining content on the internet via some social media platform. If you've discovered something new and wonderful, please share!

~Amy, Adult Services

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Who was Shakespeare?

Opening October 28th, Roland Emmerich's film Anonymous asks a question that has dogged scholars for decades: Was Shakespeare really Shakespeare? Was the author of the timeless masterpieces Hamlet and King Lear a glover's son from Stratford-upon-Avon, or someone else entirely?

The "question of authorship," as the debate has been termed, was first raised at the beginning of the 19th century.Since then, many well-known authors and scholars, including Mark Twain, Sigmund Freud, and Walt Whitman, have challenged conventional wisdom and offered up alternative candidates as the true Shakespeare. Orson Welles once commented,"I think Oxford wrote Shakespeare. If you don't, there are some awful funny coincidences to explain away."

Among those nominated as the "real"Shakespeare is Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, the same man that Anonymous posits as the author of Shakespeare's works, although he is not the only possibility. Rival playwright Ben Jonson, Christopher Marlowe, Francis Bacon and even Queen Elizabeth herself have been suggested as the true author(or authors) of Shakespeare's works.

In addition to film, many books have been written on the question of authorship, spanning an entire spectrum of possibilities. Mark Anderson's "Shakespeare"By Another Name: The Life of Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, the Man Who Was Shakespeare also argues for Edward de Vere as the true Shakespeare,asserting that, unlike the man named William Shakespeare, de Vere had the education, experience, and means to create such timeless works. Anderson also draws parallels between specific plays and episodes in de Vere's life. For example, during his twenties, de Vere accumulated a large debt with London's moneylenders, a theme echoed in The Merchant of Venice.

Other books written on the question of authorship do not make a case for a specific person as much as they cast doubt on Shakespeare as the sole author of the plays and poetry attributed to him. Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare? by James Shapiro and Players:The Mysterious Identity of William Shakespeare by Bertram Fields address the issue by pointing out what they see as inconsistencies in Shakespeare's biography, as well as the scope of the works themselves, as proof that he could not have written all of the works that are claimed as his, or, at least, not by himself.

On the other side of the argument, Scott McCrea's The Case for Shakespeare: The End of the Authorship Question works to dismantle the question altogether, especially the arguments for Edward de Vere. Taking a different approach, Bill Bryson, in Shakespeare:The World as Stage, examines the life of William Shakespeare as a person, and celebrates Shakespeare's works as his own along the way.

If you'd like to explore the subject further, the library has many more books that argue both sides of the controversy. Stop by the Reference Desk or email us at yourlibrarian@dubuque.lib.ia.us.

Happy reading!

~Allison, Adult Services