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Research and discovery

Thomas Nashe: A dominant literary voice in Elizabethan England
Thomas Nashe
Shakespeare and Beyond

Thomas Nashe: A dominant literary voice in Elizabethan England

Posted
Author
Andrew Hadfield Jennifer Richards

We are used to thinking of Elizabethan (and Jacobean) literature with Shakespeare at the center, but evidence suggests that, although Shakespeare was considered an important writer in the last decade of the queen’s reign, Thomas Nashe was one of the…

Shakespeare and the American Revolution
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare and the American Revolution

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Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

By the time the first battles of the American Revolution took place in 1775, Shakespeare had been imported from England on stage and page to the New World.

Shining a light on the other playwrights of Shakespeare's day
The Roaring Girl
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shining a light on the other playwrights of Shakespeare's day

Posted
Author
Esther Ferington

A Digital Anthology of Early Modern English Drama (EMED, for short) is a large, searchable digital resource on the hundreds of commercial plays by the other authors of Shakespeare’s time—including dozens of newly edited play texts.

Shakespeare, ecology, and the environment
Herne's Oak
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare, ecology, and the environment

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Author
Randall Martin

What does Shakespeare say about ecology and its politically engaged cousin environmentalism? Neither term appears in his work—unsurprising since they hadn’t been coined yet.

Lady Mary Wroth and 'The Countess of Montgomery's Urania'
Public domain image of Lady Mary Wroth
Shakespeare and Beyond

Lady Mary Wroth and 'The Countess of Montgomery's Urania'

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Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

Lady Mary Wroth watched Shakespeare act in his own plays, heard her relative Sir Walter Raleigh talk about founding Virginia, and almost certainly met Pocahantas and ambassadors from Morocco. Wroth’s later prose fiction echoes elements of her own life, including…

Kim Hall: Bringing African American experiences to Shakespeare
Shakespeare and Beyond

Kim Hall: Bringing African American experiences to Shakespeare

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Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

Paul Robeson was the first modern African American to perform Shakespeare—to perform Othello, and he talks in his letters and in his essays about bringing his experiences as a student in a white arena, his experiences with racism, to the…

Coat of arms discovery yields new insights into Shakespeare
Shakespeare coat of arms
Shakespeare and Beyond

Coat of arms discovery yields new insights into Shakespeare

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Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

Dig deeper into one of the biggest Shakespeare stories of 2016: the discovery of previously unknown depictions of Shakespeare’s coat of arms. Folger Curator of Manuscripts Heather Wolfe and Folger Director Michael Witmore elaborate on the significance of those discoveries…

Folger copy 54: The First Folio as family scrapbook
Shakespeare and Beyond

Folger copy 54: The First Folio as family scrapbook

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Author
Kathleen Lynch

One the First Folio’s owners, Captain Charles Hutchinson, clearly valued the book as a reflection on his family’s place in English history. Not only did he restore it, but he also treated it as a scrapbook of sorts, working in details and documents related to his family history.

Studying early modern women—in Shakespeare's plays and in his time
Early modern women reading
Shakespeare and Beyond

Studying early modern women—in Shakespeare's plays and in his time

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Author
Esther Ferington

By Esther Ferington The roles of early modern women in Shakespeare’s time—both the fictional characters in his plays and the real-life women of his era—have been central to many projects created by Georgianna Ziegler, Louis B. Thalheimer Associate Librarian and…

Folger curator shares new Shakespeare discoveries
Shakespeare coat of arms
Shakespeare and Beyond

Folger curator shares new Shakespeare discoveries

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Author
Esther French

Folger Curator of Manuscripts Heather Wolfe dropped a bombshell in The New York Times this past week: Newly discovered depictions of Shakespeare’s coat of arms from the seventeenth century provide documentary evidence that while the heralds made the grant of arms to his…

Happier without men? Shakespeare and Cervantes’ heroines, religious life, married life, and country life
Shakespeare and Beyond

Happier without men? Shakespeare and Cervantes’ heroines, religious life, married life, and country life

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Author
Kathryn Swanton

Connan Morrissey (Hermione) and Laura C. Harris (Perdita) embrace at the end of The Winter’s Tale, directed by Blake Robison, Folger Theatre, 2009. Carol Pratt. Shakespeare’s heroines often end up with husbands who don’t seem good enough for them, while…

Shakespeare and Cervantes: Dying well after living well
The dying hour
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare and Cervantes: Dying well after living well

Posted
Author
Kathryn Swanton

The dying hour of the rich man from the parable of Lazarus and the rich man. Crispijn van de Passe. Between 1590 and 1610. Folger Shakespeare Library In The Art of Dying Well, the Italian Jesuit Robert Bellarmine, a contemporary…

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