Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool
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0:11 - 0:15So I thought Craig said,
"Come do a TED Talk for my students," -
0:15 - 0:16and I thought, Why?
-
0:17 - 0:18I'm a professor.
-
0:18 - 0:20I get paid to talk for 50 minutes.
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0:20 - 0:23How the hell am I only going to be able
to talk for 15 or 18? -
0:23 - 0:25So I thought, "I'll give it a go."
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0:25 - 0:28I said, "What should I do?"
He said, "Talk about Shakespeare." -
0:28 - 0:30And I thought, "Why Shakespeare?
Why Shakespeare?" -
0:30 - 0:32The only answer I could come up with
-
0:32 - 0:36was to plagiarize our gorgeous,
young Prime Minister -
0:36 - 0:38and say, "Well, it's 2016."
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0:39 - 0:40That's a start.
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0:41 - 0:43And it's the easiest one
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0:43 - 0:47because 400 years and 6 days ago,
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0:47 - 0:49on April 23rd,
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0:49 - 0:50Shakespeare died.
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0:52 - 0:53Prince died this week.
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0:53 - 0:55He's had a lot of press.
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0:55 - 0:58Would he still have that press
400 years from now? -
0:58 - 0:59I don't know.
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0:59 - 1:01Will there be a press 400 years from now?
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1:01 - 1:03Probably not.
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1:03 - 1:06So why? Why after 400 years?
-
1:07 - 1:13In 2012, during the London Olympics,
lots of exciting things happened. -
1:14 - 1:18One of them we probably all remember
is the lightning man, right? -
1:18 - 1:20Usain Bolt repeated it again, right?
-
1:20 - 1:22Won all those sprint events.
-
1:23 - 1:26Hundreds of thousands of people
witnessed something else. -
1:27 - 1:31Every Olympics match a sport with culture.
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1:31 - 1:34And there's always a Cultural Olympiad.
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1:34 - 1:37In 2012, in London,
they chose Shakespeare. -
1:37 - 1:39There were over 100 productions
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1:39 - 1:44between April the 23rd
and the end of the event in November. -
1:44 - 1:47Seventy of those took place
in the Globe Theatre. -
1:48 - 1:52They represented countries,
over 40 countries from around the world, -
1:52 - 1:56and they were in 37 different languages.
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1:56 - 1:57Why?
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1:57 - 2:01Most of those countries
had been colonized by the English. -
2:01 - 2:05Having thrown off
all the shackles of colonization, -
2:05 - 2:07why had they kept Shakespeare?
-
2:08 - 2:12And why did they want to listen
to Shakespeare in their own language? -
2:12 - 2:14And why, when they came to London,
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2:14 - 2:20did thousands of people living in London
whose origins were in those countries -
2:20 - 2:23come to listen to Shakespeare
-
2:23 - 2:26in the language
into which they had been born? -
2:27 - 2:30That's what I want to talk
to you about today: -
2:31 - 2:34the power of listening to Shakespeare.
-
2:34 - 2:38That's why I don't want a text up there.
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2:38 - 2:41Because that would contradict me, right?
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2:41 - 2:44And that's why I'm glad
we closed that book. -
2:45 - 2:49When Shakespeare was first performed,
and for well over 200 years, -
2:49 - 2:51when people wrote about going to plays,
-
2:51 - 2:56when they wrote about
going to a Shakespeare play or any play, -
2:56 - 2:57they would write in their diary,
-
2:57 - 3:00they would write
in their commonplace book, -
3:00 - 3:05"Last night I went, and I heard
Midsummer Night's Dream." -
3:06 - 3:11"Last night I went, and I heard Hamlet."
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3:11 - 3:16No one ever wrote,
until well into the 19th century, -
3:16 - 3:18that they saw a play.
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3:19 - 3:21Because a play is about voice,
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3:22 - 3:25and no one understood that
more than Shakespeare did. -
3:26 - 3:32We are there because it consoles us
to hear a human voice, -
3:33 - 3:39because we want a voice to make
the sounds of joy and sorrow for us. -
3:40 - 3:44Because what matters in life
is what we apprehend, -
3:44 - 3:46what we seize,
-
3:46 - 3:48what seizes us -
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3:49 - 3:52those things that make us terrified,
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3:53 - 3:55and those things that make us joyful.
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3:55 - 4:01And theater brings us those,
and Shakespeare, no more so. -
4:02 - 4:03So it's curious -
-
4:04 - 4:06not tragic, just curious -
-
4:06 - 4:09that when students
come to me at university, -
4:09 - 4:13the majority of them say,
"Oh, Shakespeare. I don't know. -
4:13 - 4:15It was always so hard in high school."
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4:15 - 4:17Some would say,
"Oh, I loved it. I loved it." -
4:17 - 4:19I'd say, "What did you love about it?"
-
4:19 - 4:21"Oh, the movies. There are
such great Shakespeare movies." -
4:21 - 4:23And I have to say, "Well, no, no, no, no.
-
4:23 - 4:26Shakespeare is not
about watching a movie." -
4:26 - 4:29There has to be a person there,
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4:30 - 4:35a person who is enduring the story for us
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4:35 - 4:38so that in witnessing it,
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4:39 - 4:43we can be grasped and grasp in turn
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4:43 - 4:47the emotions that are being experienced.
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4:47 - 4:50Don't be afraid of Shakespeare, right?
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4:50 - 4:52Most of my students, many of you -
-
4:52 - 4:54one of the reasons I thought,
"Well, we'll do this," -
4:54 - 4:57is because Craig said
there'll be over 900 students here, -
4:57 - 5:00and they're all going to be doing
Shakespeare at some point, -
5:00 - 5:01holding their noses or not.
-
5:01 - 5:03I said, "What do they do?"
-
5:03 - 5:04"Well, the usual things:
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5:04 - 5:07Midsummer Night's Dream, Hamlet,
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5:07 - 5:10Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth."
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5:10 - 5:12I thought, "Great.
We'll get there. We'll see. -
5:12 - 5:15We'll talk about some of those."
-
5:15 - 5:20But most of them probably also use
the No Fear Shakespeare cribs, -
5:20 - 5:23that translate Shakespeare into English
-
5:23 - 5:25as if it wasn't English to begin with.
-
5:25 - 5:29And the Sparks Notes people
have made millions of dollars -
5:29 - 5:32off the backs of No Fear Shakespeare
-
5:34 - 5:36when we shouldn't have feared him
to begin with, right? -
5:37 - 5:39And Shakespeare
never made a penny in his life -
5:39 - 5:41off of the printing of his plays.
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5:41 - 5:44He could not have cared less.
-
5:44 - 5:48When the Folio came out,
seven years after his death, -
5:48 - 5:55it came out because the surviving partners
of his company wanted to make a memorial. -
5:55 - 5:57He never cared.
-
5:57 - 5:59There were hundreds
of editions of his works; -
5:59 - 6:01he never made a penny on them.
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6:01 - 6:03Because it wasn't about reading.
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6:03 - 6:06And that's what I want to focus on now.
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6:06 - 6:10I want to take a couple of scenes,
and I want to talk you through them, -
6:11 - 6:13and I want to try to give you a sense
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6:13 - 6:19of what you can apprehend
when you look and listen. -
6:19 - 6:23And what I'm going to say to you now
and perhaps repeat in concluding - -
6:23 - 6:27because I have no idea where I'm going;
-
6:27 - 6:31it will depend on what we hear
when we listen to these texts - -
6:32 - 6:34don't look for meaning.
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6:35 - 6:37There isn't any.
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6:37 - 6:40Don't look for a thesis.
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6:40 - 6:42Don't hunt themes.
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6:42 - 6:44Don't analyze metaphors.
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6:44 - 6:48Don't worry about what
you're going to write your essay about. -
6:48 - 6:50Just listen.
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6:51 - 6:53And open yourself up as you listen.
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6:55 - 6:57And be very responsive to what you feel.
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6:58 - 7:04Because apprehension
is far more important than comprehension, -
7:04 - 7:06and in Midsummer Night's Dream,
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7:06 - 7:09one of Shakespeare's extraordinary
figures, the Duke Theseus, -
7:09 - 7:11says precisely that
at the end of the play. -
7:11 - 7:15He says, "One of the most interesting
things about life is this." -
7:15 - 7:18He said, "Whenever we apprehend an effect,
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7:19 - 7:22we want to comprehend a cause."
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7:22 - 7:24And that's a problem,
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7:24 - 7:26especially with theater
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7:26 - 7:28and always with life.
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7:28 - 7:32Something happens to us,
and we want to know why. -
7:34 - 7:36Well, the cause doesn't matter.
-
7:36 - 7:40Who knows what the first cause
of anything is? -
7:40 - 7:44Was it God the Creator or the Big Bang?
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7:45 - 7:48They're beyond my comprehension, right?
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7:49 - 7:51But in the moment of life,
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7:52 - 7:57I apprehend constantly
what it is to be living, -
7:57 - 7:59and to seek meaning in that
-
7:59 - 8:01rather than to simply swim
-
8:01 - 8:05in the luxuriousness
of my own soul and heart -
8:06 - 8:11seems like an extraordinary
abandonment of the joy of living. -
8:11 - 8:13So let's look at Shakespeare.
-
8:13 - 8:15We'll go through maybe just one scene.
-
8:15 - 8:18The screen here tells me
I've got nine-and-a-half minutes. -
8:18 - 8:19We'll see what we can do.
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8:19 - 8:20That'll give us enough for one.
-
8:20 - 8:23I'll give you a choice;
I've got a few ideas. -
8:23 - 8:25Let's go for two
that are big ones out there. -
8:25 - 8:29If you haven't encountered them yet,
you're going to in your high school years. -
8:29 - 8:31Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet.
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8:31 - 8:33Which one do you want?
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8:33 - 8:37(Audience) Hamlet.
Romeo and Juliet. Hamlet. -
8:39 - 8:41I think,
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8:41 - 8:43I think Romeo and Juliet.
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8:43 - 8:45Right? Wrong? Craig?
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8:47 - 8:51If I can stay - oh boy,
I'm under nine minutes now. -
8:51 - 8:54So if I can talk like the Bolt Man,
-
8:54 - 8:57if we can get through this scene,
maybe we do a bit of Hamlet, -
8:57 - 8:59maybe finish with a moment from Hamlet.
-
8:59 - 9:00Here we go.
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9:00 - 9:02What I'm going to do with Romeo and Juliet
-
9:02 - 9:04is go to the scene
where we first meet Juliet -
9:04 - 9:07because it tells us something
about Shakespeare. -
9:07 - 9:09Shakespeare's great at women.
-
9:09 - 9:12He's great at listening to women
and making us listen to women. -
9:12 - 9:13And there's a reason for that.
-
9:13 - 9:17Because in his lifetime,
no woman was ever on the stage. -
9:17 - 9:20No woman ever acted on the English stage
-
9:20 - 9:24until 1665.
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9:25 - 9:27So men always played the parts of women,
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9:27 - 9:29and not just boys.
-
9:29 - 9:30There were men in the company
-
9:30 - 9:33who spent their entire career
aging through female parts. -
9:33 - 9:36So in this scene, we first meet Juliet.
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9:36 - 9:41We have Juliet, and we have the Nurse,
and we have Lady Capulet. -
9:41 - 9:44Three principal women from the play.
-
9:45 - 9:46We've not met Juliet yet;
-
9:46 - 9:48it's Act 1, scene 3.
-
9:50 - 9:52The Nurse is sitting,
-
9:53 - 9:58Lady Capulet we've met,
and she comes in and says, -
9:58 - 10:00"Where's my daughter?"
-
10:01 - 10:04We met Lady Capulet in Act 1, scene 1,
-
10:04 - 10:07when the men were all fighting,
causing all that difficulty - -
10:07 - 10:10the Montagues and the Capulets
wrestling with one another, -
10:10 - 10:12men drawing their swords,
-
10:12 - 10:14all demonstrating their masculinity.
-
10:15 - 10:18Excruciatingly funny.
-
10:19 - 10:22And Lady Capulet knows that,
and she mocks her husband. -
10:23 - 10:27She says to him, "Why bother
getting your sword out, old man? -
10:28 - 10:30There's no point to it."
-
10:31 - 10:33She's a strong woman.
-
10:34 - 10:38So she comes in, and she says,
"Where's my daughter?" -
10:39 - 10:43And the Nurse says, "Oh,
by my maiden head these last 12 years," -
10:43 - 10:47she says, "I called her; she didn't come."
-
10:47 - 10:50She says, "I swear by my virginity at 12,
I've been calling her. -
10:50 - 10:51I don't know where she is,"
-
10:51 - 10:54and then she gets up,
and she says, "Juliet," - -
10:54 - 10:56No, no, I don't want that.
I don't want anything up there. -
10:56 - 10:59Can we just kill that? Is it impossible?
-
10:59 - 11:02How do I kill those screens? Great -
-
11:03 - 11:06And she starts calling her:
-
11:06 - 11:12"Ladybird. My dear one. Where are you?"
-
11:12 - 11:14In most productions,
-
11:14 - 11:17Juliet's on the balcony
or she's not on stage, -
11:17 - 11:19because the text says, "Enter Juliet."
-
11:19 - 11:22It's always, in the original printings,
-
11:22 - 11:25they say, "Enter,"
when the character speaks. -
11:25 - 11:26She's already there.
-
11:27 - 11:30Everything the Nurse is saying,
if you listen - right? - -
11:30 - 11:33is what you do when you're playing
with a small child. -
11:33 - 11:34You must have all done that,
-
11:34 - 11:38or an aunt or an uncle or parent
has done that with you. -
11:38 - 11:41Joey, Joey, where are you, Joey?
-
11:41 - 11:43My goodness, Joey.
When are you going to come? -
11:43 - 11:46My, what am I going to do with you, Joey?
-
11:46 - 11:48And where's Joey the whole time?
-
11:49 - 11:53Right there. Right behind you,
and you pretend you don't see him. -
11:53 - 11:55That's where Juliet is
-
11:55 - 11:58if we really are listening
to what the Nurse is doing there. -
11:58 - 12:03"Ladybird. My dear one. Where are you?"
-
12:04 - 12:06And Lady Capulet is standing, watching.
-
12:07 - 12:11And eventually Juliet says,
"Here I am. Who wants me?" - -
12:11 - 12:13playing with the Nurse.
-
12:13 - 12:15The Nurse says, "Your mother."
-
12:18 - 12:21And Lady Capulet says to the Nurse,
-
12:21 - 12:22"Will you give us a minute?
-
12:22 - 12:25There's something
I need to tell my daughter." -
12:25 - 12:26And the Nurse begins to leave,
-
12:28 - 12:32and Lady Capulet says,
"No, come back. Please, come back." -
12:35 - 12:38And what she needs to tell Juliet is,
-
12:38 - 12:42"Your father has decided
that you're going to be married now, -
12:42 - 12:46and you're going to meet tonight
the man you're going to marry." -
12:47 - 12:52Now, what's crucial in this scene,
if we are listening and looking, -
12:52 - 12:54is what Lady Capulet's doing.
-
12:54 - 12:55Because always in Shakespeare
-
12:55 - 12:59in crucial scenes
when he wants us to listen, -
12:59 - 13:02there's a listener on stage,
-
13:02 - 13:04and here it's Lady Capulet,
-
13:04 - 13:09listening while her daughter
plays with the Nurse, -
13:09 - 13:12and then the Nurse tells a long story,
-
13:13 - 13:15a comic story
-
13:16 - 13:18about Juliet growing up,
-
13:18 - 13:20and Juliet's mother listens,
-
13:22 - 13:29knowing that she's about to tell
her daughter childhood is over. -
13:31 - 13:33What's she feeling while she's listening?
-
13:33 - 13:36What does any parent feel?
-
13:39 - 13:40At that moment -
-
13:40 - 13:42commonly in tv adds -
-
13:42 - 13:46when you give your child
the keys to the car for the first time? -
13:47 - 13:52When you leave them
at their university residence? -
13:54 - 13:57When their probation officer
comes and takes them away? -
13:57 - 13:58(Laughter)
-
13:58 - 14:00Whatever the point,
-
14:00 - 14:02where you realize,
-
14:03 - 14:05What happened to my child?
-
14:07 - 14:08How did I miss that?
-
14:09 - 14:10If we're listening,
-
14:11 - 14:14that's what's happening in that scene.
-
14:14 - 14:18Most productions miss that
because people are reading, -
14:18 - 14:20and they ignore Lady Capulet.
-
14:20 - 14:24An extraordinary thing happens
when the Nurse is talking. -
14:24 - 14:27They're trying to figure out
how old Juliet is, -
14:27 - 14:30and her mother says, "Oh, you know,
I don't think she's 14 yet." -
14:30 - 14:33And the Nurse is, "Oh, no, no.
It will be two weeks. -
14:33 - 14:36I remember because my Susan,
my daughter, and her -
14:36 - 14:38were born at the same time.
-
14:38 - 14:43My Susan, who God took from me
-
14:43 - 14:46because she was too good for me."
-
14:46 - 14:52The Nurse's daughter died
in her infancy, and Juliet lived. -
14:53 - 14:56The Nurse says that, looking at Juliet,
-
14:56 - 14:59and Lady Capulet is looking at Juliet,
-
15:00 - 15:02and two daughters are dead.
-
15:03 - 15:05And if we're not listening, we miss that.
-
15:06 - 15:12The Nurse tells us, "My Susan died
almost 14 years ago." -
15:12 - 15:14And Lady Capulet is thinking,
-
15:14 - 15:20"My child will be lost to me in two weeks
-
15:21 - 15:23when she marries Paris,
-
15:23 - 15:26and away she goes to live with him."
-
15:27 - 15:33And when the child I remember playing
just disappears, is gone. -
15:34 - 15:37That's the crucial thing about listening.
-
15:37 - 15:38I've got two minutes.
-
15:38 - 15:42I'll very quickly tell you something
about Hamlet and then tie this up. -
15:42 - 15:44At the end of Hamlet,
-
15:45 - 15:48when all the swordplay is going on
and the poisoning, -
15:48 - 15:50and a dozen people
are going to be dead on stage, -
15:50 - 15:52and it's going to be full of spectacle,
-
15:52 - 15:55and it turns into a real guy flick, right?
-
15:55 - 15:59There's a chick moment in there
that's powerful, and it's about mothers. -
16:00 - 16:04Gertrude says nothing but three lines.
-
16:04 - 16:11The first of them is, "Hamlet,
let me wipe your brow. -
16:11 - 16:15Take my napkin," she says,
"and wipe your brow. You look so tired." -
16:16 - 16:20At the start of the play, she'd wanted
to touch him, and he wouldn't let her. -
16:20 - 16:21He never lets her touch him;
-
16:21 - 16:24he pulls away because he's angry at her
for marrying his uncle, right? -
16:24 - 16:28Shakespeare gives her
as her second-last line, -
16:28 - 16:31"Let me wipe thy brow,"
-
16:31 - 16:35and she takes her handkerchief
and wipes the sweat off her son's brow, -
16:35 - 16:40just the way your mother,
even when you're 62 like me, -
16:40 - 16:44on a cold day, will tighten up your jacket
-
16:44 - 16:50or call you at university and say,
"Is it snowing? Wear your mittens." -
16:52 - 16:57When we don't listen in life,
we miss the small things. -
16:57 - 17:02In literature, listening is crucial
to getting those things too. -
17:02 - 17:05That's why Shakespeare matters.
-
17:05 - 17:08Not because we should read him,
-
17:08 - 17:11but because we should be listening to him.
-
17:12 - 17:16At the beginning of Hamlet,
there's a man who's all alone on stage, -
17:16 - 17:17Francisco,
-
17:17 - 17:19waiting to be relieved by Bernardo.
-
17:19 - 17:21He can be out there alone
-
17:21 - 17:24as long as the director
wants to leave him there, -
17:24 - 17:25say nothing.
-
17:25 - 17:30Bernardo comes, and Bernardo says,
"Who's there?" because it's dark. -
17:30 - 17:33And Francisco says, "Nay.
-
17:34 - 17:38[Answer me. Stand]
and unfold yourself," he says. -
17:39 - 17:41Open yourself up to me.
-
17:41 - 17:42And I say to you,
-
17:42 - 17:47unfold yourself when you read Shakespeare.
-
17:47 - 17:49Close the book,
-
17:49 - 17:51open yourself up,
-
17:51 - 17:52apprehend,
-
17:53 - 17:56and you won't worry about the meaning.
-
17:56 - 17:57Unfold,
-
17:58 - 17:59listen
-
17:59 - 18:03and allow life
and literature to touch you. -
18:04 - 18:05Thank you.
-
18:05 - 18:07(Applause)
- Title:
- Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool
- Description:
-
In the 400th year since William Shakespeare’s death, there is still reluctance among many secondary school students to accept Shakespeare as an author who speaks to them and their dilemmas. In part this derives from the misguided notion that Shakespeare’s language is historically remote, too difficult, even inaccessible. But Shakespeare is not difficult if we understand his work as he intended it - as theater, not narrative. If we listen to Shakespeare rather than reading him, if we attend to the human scenarios he presents rather the hunting for meaning, theses, and essay topics, if we recognize the everydayness rather than pursuing the remote, then Shakespeare is as contemporary in 2016 as he was in 1616.
Stephen Brown has been a 3M National Teaching Fellow and an Honorary Fellow of the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education since 1997. He is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and has been a visiting professor at the Centre for the History of the Book and the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Edinburgh. In 2013, he was Ormiston Roy Fellow in Scottish Studies at the University of South Carolina. He has published widely in the field of print culture and literacy.
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
- closed TED
- Project:
- TEDxTalks
- Duration:
- 18:16
Peter van de Ven edited English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool | ||
Peter van de Ven edited English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool | ||
Peter van de Ven approved English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool | ||
Peter van de Ven edited English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool | ||
Peter van de Ven accepted English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool | ||
Peter van de Ven edited English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool | ||
Retired user edited English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool | ||
Retired user edited English subtitles for Why Shakespeare? | Stephen Brown | TEDxStMaryCSSchool |