4.7 • 837 Ratings
🗓️ 13 October 2020
⏱️ 37 minutes
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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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