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The History Of European Theatre Podcast
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Episode 134:
Author Jem Bloomfield joins us to talk about his recently published book, ‘Allusion in Detective Fiction’, which looks at how and why allusion to Shakespeare and the Bible was used by the masters, or I should say mistresses, of golden age detective fiction. This may not seem like an obvious area when considering the pervasive influence of Shakespeare, but as you will here the connections that Jem has made can tell us a lot about how knowledge and use of Shakespeare is constantly changing.
Warning - Spoilers present!
Jem discusses major plot points of several classic detective novels, but we thought that they can hardly be counted as spoilers up to about a century after they were first published, but you have been warned.
Link to Jem's book on the publishers website:
link.springer.... (link.springer....)
Support the podcast at:
www.thehistoryofeuropeantheatre.com (www.thehistoryo...)
www.patreon.com/thoetp ( / thoetp )
www.ko-fi.com/thoetp (www.ko-fi.com/t...)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy (acast.com/privacy) for more information.
Episode link: play.headliner...
(video made with www.headliner.app)

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16 сен 2024

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@pjreads
@pjreads 8 дней назад
I have always loved Shakespeare references in novels, especially mysteries. The references were a primarily influence in my interest in Shakespeare.
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