Shakespeare
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From the ‘Miller’s Tale’ to King Lear’s roaring sea, a history of flooding in literature
Stewart Mottram, The Conversation
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How Shakespeare can help us overcome loneliness in the digital age
Marie Trotter, The Conversation Paul Yachnin, The Conversation
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The word ‘assassination’ was first used by Shakespeare in ‘Macbeth’. What are its origins?
Sumanto Chattopadhyay
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Who called William Shakespeare an ‘upstart crow’? A new study points to his co-author, Thomas Nashe
Brett Greatley-Hirsch, The Conversation Andrew Hadfield, The Conversation Rachel White, The Conversation
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Sunday book pick: Shakespeare in Palestine in Isabella Hammad’s ‘Enter Ghost’
Sayari Debnath
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Can a poem be adapted into a video game? Here’s what I learned from trying
Jon Stone, The Conversation
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Shakespeare by numbers: how mathematical breakthroughs influenced the Bard’s plays
Madeleine S Killacky, The Conversation
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What do William Shakespeare’s plays tell us about war?
Robert White, The Conversation
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Why women were not allowed to act in William Shakespeare’s plays until 1660
Elizabeth Steinway, The Conversation
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‘If not for a little murder, they’d be a good pair’: Actor Daniel Craig on Macbeth and Lady Macbeth
Scroll Staff
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Four times Shakespeare has inspired stories about robots and Artificial Intelligence
Sarah Annes Brown, The Conversation
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‘Hamnet’: When Anne Hathaway and her husband, the future playwright of ‘Hamlet’, lose their son
Radhika Oberoi
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Here’s why so many people still believe in ghosts
Anna Stone, The Conversation
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In the Shakespearean world, Hamlet is a ‘villain of genius’. Here’s why
Catherine Butler, The Conversation
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‘Is my work sexist? Duh!’ A message to UK students on exam results day from ‘Shakespeare’
Scroll Staff
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Lockdown reading: Five tips on how to read Shakespeare beyond the theatre and classroom
Emma Smith, The Conversation
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‘The best shows, like Breaking Bad, come from people who have plunged deeply into literature’
Vighnesh Hampapura
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Why do teachers make students read old literature? What can today’s generation hope to gain from it?
Elisabeth Gruner, The Conversation
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Why ‘The Tempest’ matters today: Shakespeare’s play is entangled with slavery and freedom
Paul Yachnin and Hannah Korell, The Conversation
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Shakespeare: Not a parent but a twin of modern Indian cinema and theatre, says a delicious new book
Supriya Nair