4.7 • 837 Ratings
🗓️ 29 December 2025
⏱️ 37 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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| 0:00.0 | From the Folger Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited. I'm Farah Kareem Cooper, |
| 0:09.3 | the Folger Director. These days, pretty much everything you do leaves a trace. Your watch |
| 0:16.4 | tracks your heart rate. Your phone sees where you go. Your calendar will tell you every appointment you've |
| 0:23.0 | had. And Netflix knows exactly how many episodes of Love is Blind you've watched. But historians |
| 0:29.7 | don't have this kind of rich data for many people in the past. When it comes to 17th century |
| 0:35.7 | England, one person springs to mind. For nine years during the |
| 0:40.6 | 1660s, a naval bureaucrat, an avid theatergoer named Samuel Pepys, recorded everything |
| 0:47.4 | about his life, and I do mean everything, including his unvarnished, often harsh opinions about Shakespeare. |
| 0:57.1 | Pepys' diary went on to become a crucial historical record of many details about the restoration, |
| 1:03.8 | including the Great Fire of London itself. |
| 1:07.0 | But it was also a literary scandal. |
| 1:10.2 | It wouldn't be published in full until the 1980s. |
| 1:15.0 | Professor Kate Loveman of the University of Leicester is a Peep scholar. Her new book is called The Strange History of Samuel Peeps' Diary. |
| 1:24.5 | It follows the centuries-long journey of the diary and the meanings it's had for readers. |
| 1:30.5 | Here's Kate Loveman in conversation with Barbara Bogave. |
| 1:36.2 | So I woke up this morning and I looked up entries throughout the 1660s for this day in Peep's Diary. |
| 1:45.3 | And the first one I opened was perfect because it began in bed all morning thinking to take physique, |
| 1:52.5 | but it being a frost, my wife would not have it. |
| 1:56.0 | So perfect, right? |
| 1:58.1 | Because one, he wakes up thinking about taking medicine. Does that mean a purge? Because he was so obsessed with his bowels? |
| 2:07.4 | Yes, that was probably some kind of emetic. I think his wife's objection might have been that she thought the weather was too cold rather than... |
| 2:15.6 | Too cold for a... |
... |
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