#LI-02-02 Shakespeare: Print and Performance
About Course
King's College LondonDescription
Why join the course?
Why do we continue to read and perform Shakespeare’s works around the world today? How were his plays performed and printed 400 years ago, and how has our conception of Shakespeare changed over the centuries?
King’s College London has partnered with Shakespeare’s Globe and the British Library to explore how Shakespeare’s works continue to delight audiences around the world.
Join academics, curators, publishers, actors, musicians and theatre directors, as we find out more about Shakespeare’s early modern world and consider his construction as a global icon today.
Go behind-the-scenes at The Globe
We will take you on to the stage of the Globe Theatre, to find out about performance practices both in the present day capital and in Early Modern London.
We’ll meet practitioners at the Globe and we’ll step into the world of the early modern actor to examine the processes and conditions that were at the heart of the Shakespearean playhouse.
Explore rarely-seen priceless manuscripts
The British Library has given us exclusive access to some some priceless manuscripts and early printed texts in their archives. We’ll also discover how the early modern book trade shaped the journey of Shakespeare’s text from stage to page.
Share your own insights with other learners
‘Global Shakespeares’ is one of the key themes which we will explore on the course. When you join Shakespeare: Print and Performance, you will become part of a diverse international learning community, and we will draw on everyone’s experiences of Shakespeare to enrich our discussion.
What topics will you cover?
- Performing Shakespeares
- Early Modern Print
- Shakespeare in Print Today
- Global/Local Shakespeares
Who will you learn with?
Dr Sarah Lewis is Lecturer in Shakespeare and Early Modern Literature at King’s College London.
I am Professor of English and Director of the London Shakespeare Centre at King’s College London and academic director, Shakespeare400. I have published widely on Shakespeare and his contemporaries.
Gemma Miller is a lecturer at King’s College London, Shakespeare’s Globe and Central School of Speech and Drama. Her research focus is early modern drama with a special interest in performance studies.
Who developed the course?
King’s College London, established in 1829 and a founding college of the University of London, is one of the world’s leading research and teaching universities, based in the very heart of London.
What Will I Learn?
- Reflect on Shakespeare as a global cultural icon
- Discuss early modern performance practices and the development of the theatre industry
- Investigate how the print industry developed in early modern England
- Discuss early modern literary culture and the ‘instability’ of the early modern play text
- Evaluate the impact of editorial policy on the way in which Shakespeare is read and performed today
- Explore Shakespeare in performance around the world today
Topics for this course
Performing shakespeares
Introduction to the course00:03:31
Meet the team and introduce yourself
Shakespeare as a global icon
Shakespeare in performance in the 21st century
Early modern London and the place of the stage
The early modern playhouse
Wrap-up
The course was very informative. I learned new material that I can use to create doctoral thesis.
It is a good course with lots of to find out about performance practices both in the present day capital and in Early Modern London, written communication. Thank you for this type of course.
Great refresher for me. The presenter speaks clearly. The material is well organized and easy to understand.