Тёмный

Love and Friendship in Hamlet: David Bevington Harper Lecture 

The University of Chicago
Подписаться 245 тыс.
Просмотров 23 тыс.
50% 1

More about the UChicago Harper Lectures: alumniandfriends.uchicago.edu/...
Noted Shakespeare expert David Bevington discusses how "Hamlet" presents amorous love as deeply problematic and doomed to failure, while male friendship emerges as a spiritual bulwark for the protagonist. Bevington is the Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in the humanities, professor in the departments of English and comparative literature, and chair of theater and performance studies.
➡ Subscribe: bit.ly/UCHICAGOytSubscribe
About #UChicago:
Since its founding in 1890, the University of Chicago has been a destination for rigorous inquiry and field-defining research. This transformative academic experience empowers students and scholars to challenge conventional thinking in pursuit of original ideas.
#UChicago on the Web:
Home: bit.ly/UCHICAGO-homepage
News: bit.ly/UCHICAGO-news
Facebook: bit.ly/UCHICAGO-FB
Twitter: bit.ly/UCHICAGO-TW
Instagram: bit.ly/UCHICAGO-IG
University of Chicago on RU-vid:
/ uchicago ***
ACCESSIBILITY: If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please email digicomm@uchicago.edu.

Опубликовано:

 

29 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 17   
@MrGreencheetah
@MrGreencheetah 4 года назад
At seventy-three years of age, I can now really enjoy listening to such a distinguished professor - not so much when I was actually a student at Chicago.
@bellringer929
@bellringer929 2 года назад
Some professors have a habit of cracking jokes even when talking about tragedies....and they deserve our appreciation for that
@xmaseveeve5259
@xmaseveeve5259 2 года назад
Wonderful.
@shyi1242
@shyi1242 5 лет назад
He absolutely seems to be a very prestigious English scholar, but I really don't know what I have learned from this lecture...
@avellopublishing5851
@avellopublishing5851 8 лет назад
The current Avello Publishing Journal call-for-papers is December 1st 2015.
@ContextShakespeare1740
@ContextShakespeare1740 2 года назад
Everything seems to be problematic, if he only changed his perspective. He describes a chronology which is speculation, as fact. If he put the plays in the proper context, with the correct author the problems would disappear.
@ctrl_altesc
@ctrl_altesc Год назад
Care to elaborate at this?
@bellringer929
@bellringer929 2 года назад
A long serious talk dies early.
@johnnyjohnny8636
@johnnyjohnny8636 Год назад
Deep bro
@TheWhitehiker
@TheWhitehiker 2 года назад
mumbling hard to follow--drop speed for better listening.
@mauve9266
@mauve9266 2 года назад
8:00
@nurulahad3162
@nurulahad3162 4 года назад
what's the word he says @14:00
@mariamuller1314
@mariamuller1314 4 года назад
métier
@youngmind6650
@youngmind6650 4 года назад
@@mariamuller1314 thank you!
@Fjesilva
@Fjesilva 5 лет назад
The Tempest. This is the literary testament of Shakespeare 403 years later. That I have deducted in one night. I do not know why the Shakespearean experts speak of the island as an imaginary place, or the Bermuda Islands, and another hypothesis. The island of The Tempest, Is England. The tests are here. Shakespeare wanted, and prayed, for Spain to invade England, and Catholics to be liberated. Although he feels very English. Nobody wants to imagine that Shakespere, the most universal English, wanted Spain to invade England, because England builds its national identity remembering the year 1588. But this is the truth: Precisely because Shakespeare secretly practiced Catholicism, and his family had been recused and impoverished, he wrote the Tempest to vent, because of the Protestant intolerance against Catholics. It was the last play, and he risked reprisals and left the theater. The tempest that disperses the ships (not the English action, because later there were more invincible navies, 2nd and 3rd, of 1596 and 1597, dispersed by storms). But the tempest could also bring an army to rescue the Catholics of the island. Who lives on the island of Shakespare's Tempest? They had lived Sycorax before. Look for Sycorax in Wikipedia, for example: "An especially odd and early guess at a meaning by one critic was sic or rex, a Latin homophone alluding to Queen Elizabeth's pride". Elisabeth Sycorax only appears in the named text. She is described as a ruthless witch who has already died. Now there is Caliban, which is a cannibal transformation. Caliban is the son of Elisabeth (who brought Protestantism again after the death of Maria Tudor). Protestant cannibals are "eating" Catholics. Shakespeare is very cruel to Caliban, who is a deformed being, "like Protestantism then?" But who lives abandoned on that desert island of the Tempest? (It can be deserted if they kill us all, thinks Shakespeare). Live Miranda (María Tudor), "daugther" of Prospero, Duke of Milan (Felipe II of Spain was Duke of Milan, and before King of England, and the great protector of Catholicism in Europe) Who commanded the invincible army of 1588 ?: Alonso Pérez de Guzmán (who was captain general of Lombaría , Milan). Who commanded the navy in the text of Shakespeare? a man named Alonso, king of Naples. Always Italy, where the Pope is, and always Spanish territories in Italy. Who is the greatest traitor in Spain in history? Antonio Pérez, who betrayed Felipe II, and traveled to England to ally with Elisabeth. Shakespeare met Antonio Pérez. Shakespare makes a caricature of Antonio Pérez in Love's Labour Lost, called him Don Adriano de Armado. Who is the greatest traitor in the Tempest? Antonio, who has stolen Prospero (Felipe II) the title of Duke of Milan, has usurped the name of Spain. The daughter of Alonso (head of the real and fictitious army) is called Claribel. How could Spain invade England? Taking troops from the Netherlands, to embark them in the army. Who was the Spanish sovereign of the Spanish Netherlands, daughter of Philip II, king who sent the army? Isabel Clara Eugenia. Isabel Clara Eugenia was proposed to be queen of France. The King of France rejected the proposal, but in return he made France Catholic. "Paris is worth a Mass". Shakespeare was thinking that this was a solution for England, a wedding like that of Philip and Mary, an invasion, or the solution that there was in France, to bring Catholicism to England. In addition, Claribel comes from Tunisia, where the uncle of Isabel Clara Eugenia, had just left the Moors expelled from Spain by infidels. Sycorax (Elisabeth) fue expulsada de Argel, por hacer brujería, era menos cristiana que los argelinos. Who is the servant of Prospero and Felipe II: Ariel, the wind, who has a childish spirit, and does not always obey Prospero. But Prospero reminds him of Ariel, that he rescued him from Sycorax. When? When Philip II of Spain was king of England he brought Catholicism. So in The Tempest, Ariel brings the ships to England. Shakespare could not go further without discovering his intention. The text of the Tempest is full of much more subtle allusions, almost on each page, showing the suffering and relief of Shakespare. The text talks about the barrels of wine from Jerez (Spain) that the fleet brings to fill the whole island, and that are hidden in a cave (wine for Catholic Masses, which were hidden in the 17th century? )He wanted what he thought was best for England. What is the last sentence of the Tempest, the farewell phrase of Shakespeare from the theaters? A Catholic phrase.
@kw6143
@kw6143 4 года назад
Francisco Escudero Silva First, the theory that Shakespeare was a Catholic (cf. Richard Wilson, Clare Asquith, ...) is speculative and has little traction today. Second, The Tempest was not his last play. Shakespeare wrote several plays afterwards.
@neilbrennan5766
@neilbrennan5766 3 года назад
Can't speak coherent English. Has little to say. Does a poor job not saying it.
Далее
Stephen Greenblatt - Shakespeare's Freedom
47:18
Просмотров 32 тыс.
Perspective: The Making of Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet
43:47
Kierkegaard on Love
7:58
Просмотров 315 тыс.
Andrew George | Be My Baby in Babylonia
53:36
Просмотров 40 тыс.
Playing Hamlet | Q&A with Andrew Scott
39:43
Просмотров 57 тыс.
Ten Things I Learned From Shakespeare
1:10:07
Просмотров 46 тыс.
Hamlet (1 of 3)
1:22:17
Просмотров 76 тыс.