BUFVC Search
Current Search
Previous Searches
Short video by J. Draper, London AV content creator and tour guide, in which she explores changing modes relating to sexuality and identity and possible clues to Shakespeare’s own orientation.
A selection of audio clips performed by Canadian Air Farce and presented on the Canadian Adaptations of Shakespeare website (CASP). They offer comedic representations of Shakespeare in relation to Canadian...
Video lecture by Professor Ato Quayson (Stanford University) who interprets the anti-Semitism in The Merchant of Venice via the framework provided by Frantz Fanon in his essay, ‘The Fact of Blackness’.
Extract from a Russia Today TV broadcast hosted by Bill Dod in which Former UKIP MEP Roger Helmer criticises Shakespeare’s Globe for starting a series of webinars on Decolonising Shakespeare (qv).
Podcast hosted by Sebastian Michael. Each edition looks at a particular sonnet, which is first recited then analysed. This episode look at the sonnet though to possibly reveal the identity of the youth to...
Lecture 12 in the Approaching Shakespeare series asks how seriously we can take the farcical exploits of Comedy of Errors, drawing out the play’s serious concerns with identity and selfhood.
Podcast in which hosts Professor Michelle Ephraim (Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Massachusetts) and Professor Caroline Bicks (University of Maine) discuss everyday issues through a Shakespearean lens. In...
Podcast hosted by Barry Edelstein that explores Shakespeare outside of the theatre. In this edition he looks at the rivalry between Irish-English actor Charles Macready and American actor Edwin Forrest and...
Recording of the debut performance of the one-man show by Michael Henry Dunn. Sherlock Holmes (Dunn) gives an audiovisual lecture which aims to finally establish the true identity of William Shakespeare -...
Podcast. An interview with Brian Carroll about his book, Shakespeare’s Sceptered Isle: Finding English National Identity in the Plays, on what Elizabethan audiences may have thought being ‘English’...