4.7 • 837 Ratings
🗓️ 18 August 2020
⏱️ 33 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | The African-American experience with Shakespeare goes back a long ways, |
| 0:06.0 | maybe even longer than you'd imagine. |
| 0:13.5 | From the Folger Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited. |
| 0:18.9 | I'm Michael Whitmore, the Folgers Director. Like so much else surrounding |
| 0:23.6 | American race relations, the African American performance of Shakespeare is thoroughly bound up |
| 0:29.6 | with the experiences of slavery, freedom, Jim Crow segregation, and the battle for equal rights. |
| 0:37.2 | In this podcast and the next, we take a look at this uniquely American intersection |
| 0:43.2 | between Shakespeare and society, the choices made by African American actors and scholars |
| 0:49.7 | who over the years have performed, taught, and studied Shakespeare. |
| 0:55.2 | This episode, which we originally broadcast five years ago, focuses in part on two fascinating |
| 1:01.6 | times in the long history of African American engagement with Shakespeare. |
| 1:06.8 | One story begins in the 1820s, when freedom first came to the enslaved African Americans |
| 1:13.2 | of New York. |
| 1:14.8 | The other encompasses the long period of change, stretching from the 1950s to today. |
| 1:21.4 | We call this podcast Freedom, Hey Day, Hey Day, Freedom. |
| 1:26.5 | It's narrated by Rebecca Shear. |
| 1:29.1 | Here's an anecdote to consider as we start. |
| 1:31.7 | It's from Kim Felicia Hall, a professor of English who teaches Shakespeare at Barnard College. |
| 1:36.5 | I'll just say when students come to my class and they're shocked that I'm black, that's |
| 1:41.4 | a kind of subtle message. |
| 1:42.7 | And I had a student one time who came and wanted to know where my degree was from. |
| 1:49.1 | Who does Shakespeare belong to in America? We like to say everyone. But does he? I don't think people are told specifically, you're not allowed to interpret Shakespeare, but I think there are kind of subtle |
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