Shakespeare's Sonnets
In Our Time24 Jun 2021

Shakespeare's Sonnets

To celebrate Melvyn Bragg’s 27 years presenting In Our Time, some well-known fans of the programme have chosen their favourite episodes. Historian and broadcaster Simon Schama has selected the episode on Shakespeare’s Sonnets and recorded an introduction to it. (This introduction will be available on BBC Sounds and the In Our Time webpage shortly after the broadcast and will be longer than the one broadcast on Radio 4). In 1609 Thomas Thorpe published a collection of poems entitled Shakespeare’s Sonnets, “never before imprinted”. Yet, while some of Shakespeare's other poems and many of his plays were often reprinted in his lifetime, the Sonnets were not a publishing success. They had to make their own way, outside the main canon of Shakespeare’s work: wonderful, troubling, patchy, inspiring and baffling, and they have appealed in different ways to different times. Most are addressed to a man, something often overlooked and occasionally concealed; one early and notorious edition even changed some of the pronouns.

With:

Hannah Crawforth Senior Lecturer in Early Modern Literature at King’s College London

Don Paterson Poet and Professor of Poetry at the University of St Andrews

And

Emma Smith Professor of Shakespeare Studies at Hertford College, Oxford

Producer: Simon Tillotson

Reading list:

Stephen Booth, Shakespeare's Sonnets (first published 1978; Yale University Press, 2000)

Hannah Crawforth and Elizabeth Scott-Baumann (eds.), On Shakespeare’s Sonnets: A Poets’ Celebration (Arden, 2016)

Hannah Crawforth, Elizabeth Scott-Baumann and Clare Whitehead (eds.), Shakespeare’s Sonnets: The State of Play (Arden, 2018)

Katherine Duncan-Jones, Shakespeare's Sonnets (The Arden Shakespeare, 1997)

Patricia Fumerton, ‘”Secret” Arts: Elizabethan Miniatures and Sonnets’ (Representations 15, summer 1986, University of California Press)

Kim Hall, Things of Darkness: Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England (Cornell University Press, 1995), especially chapter 2, ‘Fair Texts/Dark Ladies: Renaissance Lyric and the Poetics of Color’

John Kerrigan, The Sonnets and A Lover's Complaint (Penguin Classics, 1986)

Jane Kingsley-Smith, The Afterlife of Shakespeare’s Sonnets (Cambridge University Press, 2019)

Don Paterson, Reading Shakespeare’s Sonnets (Faber, 2010)

Oscar Wilde (ed. John Sloan), The Complete Short Stories (Oxford World’s Classics), especially ‘The Portrait of Master W.H.’

This episode was first broadcast in June 2021.

Spanning history, religion, culture, science and philosophy, In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 is essential listening for the intellectually curious. In each episode, host Melvyn Bragg and expert guests explore the people, ideas, events and discoveries that have shaped our world

In Our Time is a BBC Studios production

Episoder(1077)

The Boxer Rebellion

The Boxer Rebellion

In the hot summer of 1900, Peking, the capital of China, was under heavy siege. But the surrounding forces were not foreign, they were Chinese. This was the Boxer Rebellion, the moment when the 'Socie...

19 Mar 200942min

The Library of Alexandria

The Library of Alexandria

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Library at Alexandria. Founded by King Ptolemy in the 3rd century BC the library was the first attempt to collect all the knowledge of the ancient world in one plac...

12 Mar 200942min

The Measurement Problem in Physics

The Measurement Problem in Physics

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of the deepest problems in contemporary physics. It’s called the measurement problem and it emerged from the flurry of activity in the early 20th century that gave ...

5 Mar 200942min

The Waste Land and Modernity

The Waste Land and Modernity

Melvyn Bragg and guests, including Steve Connor and Lawrence Rainey, discuss TS Eliot's seminal poem The Waste Land and its ambivalence to the modern world of technology, democracy and capitalism that...

26 Feb 200942min

The Observatory at Jaipur

The Observatory at Jaipur

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Observatory in Jaipur with its vast and beautiful instruments built to make astronomical measurements of the stars. Commissioned in the early 18th century by the Ra...

19 Feb 200942min

Carthage's Destruction

Carthage's Destruction

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Destruction of Carthage. The North African city of Carthage was rich and powerful, but in the second century BC it suffered a terrible fate. The Greek historian App...

12 Feb 200942min

The Brothers Grimm

The Brothers Grimm

Melvyn Bragg discusses the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm with Juliette Wood, Marina Warner and Tony Phelan. The German siblings who in 1812 published a collection of fairy tales including Rapunzel...

5 Feb 200942min

Swift's A Modest Proposal

Swift's A Modest Proposal

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of the most brilliant and shocking satires ever written in English – Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal. Masquerading as an attempt to end poverty in Ireland once a...

29 Jan 200942min

Populært innen Historie

rss-dette-ma-aldri-skje-igjen
historier-som-endret-norge
historier-som-endret-verden
henrettelsespodden
rss-nadelose-nordmenn-gestapo
rss-frontkjemperne
rss-gamle-greier
sektledere
rss-historiske-romanser
rss-benadet
aftenposten-historie
historiepodden-ww2
historiepodden
rss-historiepodden-ww2
rss-alt-var-bedre-for
taakeprat
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
med-egne-oyne
nbarrangement
rss-gangsterpodden