4.7 • 837 Ratings
🗓️ 24 September 2024
⏱️ 35 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | From the Folger's Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited on Barbara Bove. |
0:09.3 | Spoiler alert, many characters in Shakespeare's comedy swap genders, cross-stress, and fall in love with members of the same sex. |
0:17.5 | That fluidity that we all have noticed makes the plays easy to mold to our contemporary ideas |
0:23.4 | about gender and sexuality. But what did Shakespeare really think of all of this? Was he playing |
0:29.3 | for easy laughs? Or did he really have a more inclusive and expansive view of love and attraction? |
0:36.4 | Will Tosh set out to answer these questions with his new book, |
0:39.6 | Straight Acting. Tosh is the head of research at Shakespeare's Globe, but he wrote the book |
0:44.7 | for a general audience. It takes the form of a literary biography of Shakespeare, but it also |
0:50.2 | looks at the culture he lived in. And it turns out, early modern London was a pretty gay place. |
0:57.1 | And just in case you're wondering, one thing the book is not about is whether Shakespeare was gay. |
1:03.1 | We don't know, and we'll most likely never know that. Tosh makes it clear early on in his book |
1:08.3 | that that's beside the point. He's interested in a much more |
1:11.6 | nuanced exploration of Shakespeare as an artist who wrote about gender and sexuality and was, |
1:17.6 | as Tash phrases it, informed and inspired by the complex mix of patriarchy, power, homoeroticism, |
1:26.0 | and homophobia around him. |
1:28.3 | Will Tosh joins us on the line from London. |
1:31.3 | Hi Will. |
1:32.3 | Hi, it's good to hear your voice. |
1:33.3 | Oh, well, it's lovely to meet you in my head. |
1:36.3 | Will, did this book start with Shakespeare or queerness in general in the early modern period? |
1:42.3 | Well, that's a really good question because the long run-up to the book |
1:47.3 | was two decades of me thinking about the history of queer desire |
... |
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