This year marks
the 400th anniversary of the death of William Shakespeare. While
Great Britain, never a slouch in the “can we find some anniversary celebration
to draw tourists” department, has all kinds of recognitions and celebrations
underway in Stratford-on-Avon
as well as the rest of the country, the United States is mounting its
own extensive series of Shakespeare festivities.
And the bard
would likely smile to know he’s become a hashtag on Twitter: #Shakespeare400.
“@RomeoMontague:
Hark! What tweet through yon window breaks? It is the moon, and @JulietCapulet
is the sun. #Shakespeare400”
And the books.
And calendars. And desk diaries. For those of us who might have been worried
about the demise of Shakespeare in high school and college English curriculums,
a
simple search on Amazon for “Shakespeare 2016” is reassuring.
One of the best
recently published books on Shakespeare has less to do with the
quadricentennial celebration and more to do with what happened a little less
than 400 years ago – 1606 to be precise. The
Year of Lear: Shakespeare in 1606 by James Shapiro, the Larry Miller
Professor of English at Columbia University, is a wonder of re-creation of that
year in Shakespeare life.
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