In the Footsteps of The Bard
In Shakespeare’s Journey Home, Julian Dutton seeks to discover something new about the playwright by walking in his shoes.
In Shakespeare’s Journey Home, Julian Dutton seeks to discover something new about the playwright by walking in his shoes.
Gracchus and its conclusion represent a musical offering on the altar of our great dramatic tradition.
The beauty of The Bard has not dimmed despite the passage of four centuries.
Sin is a perennial reality that we cannot eradicate through political will. Instead, we are called to heal the world. One of the best dramatic considerations of this is Shakespeare’s hilarious, beautiful, and criminally overlooked play, Measure for Measure.
The final in a three-part series exploring Shakespeare’s engagement with pagan/Roman morality in Julius Caesar, this essay looks at suicide in the play.
The second in a three-part series exploring Shakespeare’s engagement with pagan/Roman morality in Julius Caesar, this essay looks at the ethics of regicide.
The first in a three-part series exploring Shakespeare’s engagement with pagan/Roman morality in Julius Caesar, this essay focuses on the character of Caesar himself.
The idea of motherlessness in Shakespeare’s The Tempest and Huxley’s Brave New World may help us understand our own age, in which state encroachment and market forces work together for the abolition of motherhood.
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