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Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

Writing About the Plague in Shakespeare’s England

Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

Folger Shakespeare Library

Arts

4.7837 Ratings

🗓️ 13 October 2020

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Between 1348 and the early years of the 18th century, successive waves of the plague rolled across Europe, killing millions of people and affecting every aspect of life. Despite the plague’s enormous toll on early modern English life, Shakespeare’s plays refer to it only tangentially. Why is that? And what did people write about the plague in early modern England? Over the past 20 years, Rebecca Totaro has been collecting contemporary writing about the plague. She has written five books about its cultural impact. We asked her to join us for a conversation about what Shakespeare’s contemporaries wrote about the plague—and why, just as often, they turned away from it. She is interviewed by Barbara Bogaev. Dr. Rebecca Totaro is an associate dean and a professor of literature in the College of Arts & Sciences at Florida Gulf Coast University. She has written or edited five books: Meteorology and Physiology in Early Modern Culture; Representing the Plague in Early Modern England, which she wrote with Ernest B. Gilman; The Plague Epic in Early Modern England: Heroic Measures, 1603–1721; The Plague in Print; and Suffering in Paradise: The Bubonic Plague in English Literary Studies from More to Milton. From the Shakespeare Unlimited podcast. Published October 13, 2020. © Folger Shakespeare Library. All rights reserved. This podcast episode, “’Twas Pretty, Though a Plague,” was produced by Richard Paul. Garland Scott is the associate producer. It was edited by Gail Kern Paster. Ben Lauer is the web producer. We had technical help from Andrew Feliciano and Evan Marquart at Voice Trax West in Studio City, California.

Transcript

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0:00.0

It's 2020, and we're recording this in the middle of a global pandemic.

0:06.0

As of now, there's been a lot of memorable journalism on the virus's impact on our lives,

0:11.8

but so far at least there hasn't been a lot of art.

0:16.3

Should we expect that to change?

0:18.9

While we don't know, there is a precedent. From the Folger Shakespeare Library,

0:30.6

this is Shakespeare Unlimited. I'm Michael Whitmore, the Folger Director. Dr. Rebecca Totaro is an associate dean and professor of literature in the College of Arts

0:42.2

and Sciences at Florida Gulf Coast University.

0:45.9

And for most of the 21st century, she's had what many might consider an unusual obsession.

0:53.0

Over the last 20 or so years,

0:55.4

she has collected writing that was done during Europe's

0:58.8

Great Plague Epidemics, the years between 1348

1:03.3

and the first quarter of the 18th century

1:05.9

when outbreaks killed millions upon millions of people.

1:09.8

She has published these writings and written about them

1:12.4

in five books. The work she's collected includes poetry, pamphlets by civic and church authorities,

1:20.4

and utopian novels that look at what life might be like in the future. What you don't find

1:26.0

much of are plays. And that's one of the things we'll

1:30.0

talk about, why Marlowe, Fletcher, Shakespeare, and most of the other great dramatists of the era

1:36.5

avoided this topic like, well, avoided it like the plague. Professor Totaro talked to us recently from her office in Fort Myers,

1:47.0

at a time when Florida was at the height of its battle with COVID-19. We call this podcast,

1:54.0

T'was pretty though a plague. Rebecca Totaro is interviewed by Barbara Bogave.

2:00.0

You have written five books about this subject.

...

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