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shakespeare

Approaching Shakespeare

Love's Labour's Lost

Emma Smith continues her Approaching Shakespeare series with a lecture on the play Love's Labour's Lost.
TORCH Post-Show Conversations

TORCH Post-Show Conversations: Much Ado About Nothing

Listen in as Judith Buchanan and Emma Smith discuss a March 2022 RSC production of Much Ado About Nothing
Professor of Poetry
Captioned

In Sleep a King

This is a sleep-talk on the subject of waking up with Sonnet 87 (by Shakespeare) in the background. This talk was given by Alice Oswald on the 25th November 2021.
The Oxford/Berlin Creative Collaborations

WillPlay: Chat, Play, Learn Shakespeare

This podcast explores WillPlay, an AI-powered reimagining of Shakespeare's plays for school students.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
Captioned

Live Event: This is Shakespeare - Prof Emma Smith in conversation with Erica Whyman OBE

Part of the Humanities Cultural Programme, one of the founding stones for the future Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Out of Silence 1: William Shakespeare

From the Silence Hub Network. Professor Alexandra Harris discusses Shakespeare's sonnet 23, communication in lockdown, body language and masks with Professor Kate McLoughlin.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Derek Attridge 'The Experience of Poetry' Book Launch Panel Discussion

This event celebrates the publication of Professor Derek Attridge's work The Experience of Poetry with a book launch panel discussion.
Approaching Shakespeare
Captioned

The Two Gentlemen of Verona

Professor Emma Smith gives the last of her 2017 Shakespeare lectures on his early comedy, Two Gentlemen of Verona.
Approaching Shakespeare
Captioned

Henry VI, Part 2

Professor Emma Smith continues her Approaching Shakespeare series with a 2017 lecture on the early history play, Henry VI, Part 2.
Approaching Shakespeare
Captioned

The Merry Wives of Windsor

Professor Emma Smith lectures on Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor.
Approaching Shakespeare
Captioned

All's Well That Ends Well

Professor Emma Smith lectures on Shakespeare’s comedy All's Well That Ends Well.
Approaching Shakespeare
Captioned

Cymbeline

Professor Emma Smith continues her Approaching Shakespeare series with a lecture on one of Shakespeare’s later plays, Cymbeline.
Shakespeare and the Brain

Extracts from Shakespeare, read by Roland Oliver (actor): Richard II Act V, Scene 5; Macbeth Act II, Scene 1; Henry IV Part 2, Act IV, Scene 3

Roland (an actor and alumnus of St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford) concludes the ‘Shakespeare and the Brain’ event by reading relevant extracts from three of Shakespeare’s plays.
Shakespeare and the Brain

The Hunter Heartbeat Method – Kelly Hunter (actor, director and educator)

Kelly gives an outline of some of her work using sensory drama games, using Shakespeare’s works, to interact and play with children with autism.
Shakespeare and the Brain

Shakespeare’s Memory – Professor Rodrigo Quian Quiroga (Director of the Centre for Systems Neuroscience, University of Leicester)

Rodrigo’s talk references the writing of Jorge Luis Borges, particularly his short stories 'Shakespeare’s Memory' and 'Funes the Memorious', which deal with memory.
Shakespeare and the Brain

Shakespeare as Observer and Psychologist – Professor Paul Matthews (Fellow by Special Election, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford; Edmond and Lily Safra Chair and Head of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London)

Paul focuses on some of the questions that Shakespeare was asking about the mind, and how the same sorts of issues are approached now by neuroscientists.
Shakespeare and the Brain

Shakespeare, Mind and World – Dr Tom MacFaul (Lecturer in English, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford)

Tom discusses how Shakespeare’s age thought about thinking. In particular, he looks at the transformative power of thought and the idea in some of Shakespeare’s works that the mind is free to create its own world.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Performing Shakespeare: then and now

Jonathan Lloyd and Tiffany Stern, discuss performing Shakespeare in the past and now
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Shakespeare and the Victorians

Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, Professor of English Literature, Oxford, gives a talk for Shakespeare Oxford 2016 series.
In Our Spare Times

Shakespeare and Music

Alice Harberd, Michael Dobson, Fleur Smith, Adriana Stoiber, and Simon Smith discuss Shakespeare and Music.

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