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Helen Vendler Tribute (& her work on Plath)
A short video marking the passing of Helen Vendler, author of books on Shakespeare, Keats, Yeats and many more.
Переглядів: 305

Відео

How Many Children Had Lady Macbeth?
Переглядів 1185 місяців тому
Happy Shakespeare Day! Today I'm talking about L C Knight's 1933 essay, How Many Children Had Lady Macbeth?
Lloyd Evans Has to Pay
Переглядів 2155 місяців тому
Reacting to Lloyd Evans recent piece in the Spectator
Mary Reilly: What Jekyll's Housemaid Saw
Переглядів 1055 місяців тому
Link to the movie adaptation: ua-cam.com/video/v4IfXR-1DqY/v-deo.htmlsi=071Jfr06sMFeQXPD
Last Seen Falling into a Canal (Original Story)
Переглядів 685 місяців тому
This is an original story set on Edinburgh's Union Canal. Hope you enjoy!
Two Shakespeare Bombshells in a Week?!
Переглядів 2835 місяців тому
Matthew Steggle on Twitter: @MatthewSteggle Darren Freebury Jones on Twitter: @Freeburian www.theguardian.com/culture/2024/apr/07/shakespeare-acted-in-a-1598-ben-jonson-play-scholars-analysis-finds
Shakespeare Authorship Drama
Переглядів 2335 місяців тому
Oliver Kamm's letter of complaint to London Library: OliverKamm/status/1778104734093639795
A Look at Witches: Macbeth & Sylvia Plath
Переглядів 1385 місяців тому
Here's the event page for tomorrow's book club! www.eventbrite.co.uk/manage/events/875558116897/tickets
Othello Goes Woke: He's Black Now!
Переглядів 1855 місяців тому
You won't believe what those lunatics at the Globe have gone and done now...
"What a disgusting pair of twits!"
Переглядів 1875 місяців тому
The Roald Dahl reboots are off to a terrific start!
Poetry is Finished (Again)
Переглядів 965 місяців тому
Here is the Spectator article by Angela Patmore: www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-poetry-society-has-betrayed-poetry/
An Aside on Macbeth & the Metaverse
Переглядів 565 місяців тому
The book I am reviewing is called Our Next Reality, by Alvin Grayling and Louis Rosenberg
Kookaburra (1998) by Frieda Hughes | Analysis & Commentary
Переглядів 1745 місяців тому
S3E96 On today's episode, Ash looks at a poem from Frieda Hughes' debut collection, Wooroloo, discussing Hughes' longstanding connection with birds, and how 'Kookaburra' relates to the poetry of her parents, Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath. Title Music: 'Not Drunk' by The Joy Drops. All other music by Epidemic Sound. @earreadthis earreadthis@gmail.com earreadthis
Walter Scott & Sylvia Plath: a Death Valley Connection!
Переглядів 605 місяців тому
Watch A Day in Death Valley (1944): ua-cam.com/video/OsTH4kmtjRU/v-deo.htmlsi=udcmDLg5g-dd5wEC
Scott-Land!
Переглядів 745 місяців тому
A quick book review of Scott-Land by Stuart Kelly, a brilliant study of the life, works and legacy of Walter Scott.
Brontës Play Director: "My Superpower is Not Reading the Brontës"
Переглядів 3305 місяців тому
Brontës Play Director: "My Superpower is Not Reading the Brontës"
Thoughts on Poor Things (2023)
Переглядів 2537 місяців тому
Thoughts on Poor Things (2023)
Recent Reads! Macbeth Retold & Glasgow of Old!
Переглядів 1997 місяців тому
Recent Reads! Macbeth Retold & Glasgow of Old!
When your characters are too gorgeous to mock
Переглядів 5737 місяців тому
When your characters are too gorgeous to mock
"This isn't a review. It's a stand-up routine."
Переглядів 1,3 тис.7 місяців тому
"This isn't a review. It's a stand-up routine."
No, Reading is NOT Sexy
Переглядів 2,3 тис.7 місяців тому
No, Reading is NOT Sexy
Is Ralph Fiennes Right About Trigger Warnings?
Переглядів 2647 місяців тому
Is Ralph Fiennes Right About Trigger Warnings?
Daft Article on Iris Murdoch
Переглядів 2937 місяців тому
Daft Article on Iris Murdoch
Sylvia Plath & Artifical Intelligence
Переглядів 1177 місяців тому
Sylvia Plath & Artifical Intelligence
Introducing John Kay's Bookclub!
Переглядів 657 місяців тому
Introducing John Kay's Bookclub!
Recent Reads! Scotland, Sci-Fi and the Stage!
Переглядів 1507 місяців тому
Recent Reads! Scotland, Sci-Fi and the Stage!
Funniest Line in Shakespeare
Переглядів 3017 місяців тому
Funniest Line in Shakespeare
Should Only Disabled Actors Play Richard III?
Переглядів 3557 місяців тому
Should Only Disabled Actors Play Richard III?
Bookshopping with Synchronicity!
Переглядів 597 місяців тому
Bookshopping with Synchronicity!
Address to Edinburgh (1786) by Robert Burns | Analysis & Commentary
Переглядів 1388 місяців тому
Address to Edinburgh (1786) by Robert Burns | Analysis & Commentary

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @kpp9737
    @kpp9737 16 днів тому

    I love how the materials were prepared and presented; informative and entertaining, thank you!🎉

  • @crow7843
    @crow7843 29 днів тому

    Fascinating.. This came up in my feed because I've been listening to the Voice Squad's version of 'Now Westlin' Winds' on repeat as I learn to sing it. They've changed a few words here & there from Burns original, but it's by far my favorite version. If you haven't heard it, check it out!

    • @crow7843
      @crow7843 28 днів тому

      Came back to add- m.ua-cam.com/video/MLepjUHsNtA/v-deo.html&pp=8AUB This is the version I've been enjoying. When they released it on an album, they titled it "Autumn Joy", which seems a bit odd considering the violent and gory bits..

  • @mumblecurve
    @mumblecurve Місяць тому

    Love your podcasts. Ta....

  • @c.a.savage5689
    @c.a.savage5689 Місяць тому

    Very glad to have found your video podcast. Chandler is a genius at creating atmosphere and memorable descriptions. He's infuriating at plot development (i.e., lousy) and I'm always amazed at the number of unnecessary corpses that pile up before the whole mess finally grinds to a halt. And yet, I will always gravitate to anything with his name on it. Again and again.

  • @rebeccaglomp5396
    @rebeccaglomp5396 Місяць тому

    (Just as soon as doctor jekyll was going to drink the hyde potion until he heard his niece Kayla coming inside) Kayla: uncle henry? Doctor jekyll: sorry edward, it's going to wait, not with my niece around. (Goes downstairs and Rushes to the living room and sits in one of his chairs and grabs a book and reads it) (Kayla opens the door and closes and takes off her hooded cloak and hangs it up) Kayla: uncle henry, I'm back from my last day of art class. Doctor jekyll: I'm in the living room dear. (Kayla walks to the living room and sees her uncle in a chair, reading a book) Kayla: oh uncle henry, it feels so good to be home.

  • @rebeccaglomp5396
    @rebeccaglomp5396 Місяць тому

    What if doctor jekyll had a niece named Kayla?

  • @MarkeyTeach
    @MarkeyTeach Місяць тому

    I hope you're still planning on releasing your Milton video!

  • @BaileyJean1001
    @BaileyJean1001 Місяць тому

    Amazing! I just read this poem on my own and knew I needed a deep dive. Thank you ❤

  • @smileyman1721
    @smileyman1721 2 місяці тому

    Left out League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and Once Upon a Time.

  • @robertgallagher5285
    @robertgallagher5285 2 місяці тому

    Interesting that Chandler fell back to the Philip Marlowe character in his later novels out of no other choice where I always thought he kept with the Philip Marlowe character out of choice and I thought it simple and brilliant marketing??!!!

  • @GrantTarredus
    @GrantTarredus 2 місяці тому

    A sensational job! Thanks!

  • @sergeypavlov1511
    @sergeypavlov1511 2 місяці тому

    O.K.

  • @marklucachev6695
    @marklucachev6695 2 місяці тому

    I do always wonder why explorers like Darwin didnt just bring a couple male and females of the species back and breed them for eating? So you're going to kill and taste this animal there and then leave, and for possibly no other human either to get to eat that delicious _____ (turtle, dugong, etc)

  • @fetidcreeper
    @fetidcreeper 2 місяці тому

    Always thought gaughan was pronounced "goggin," but pronounciation is whatever. Great research lad

  • @kevinrussell-jp6om
    @kevinrussell-jp6om 2 місяці тому

    I think you ga....I mean GUys are sniffing up the wrong gender trail when discussing Marlowe's orientation. Chandler didn't really like anyone, but I don't think that implies there is homo-eroticism lurking in the lake or in Chandler's psyche. His history (as much as I can decipher) contains no hint of repressed desires or thinly-hidden tendencies or behaviors. IF he were English (or even part English....he's not, wasn't his mother Irish?) we could consider some of the content "just your typically English male flirtation with acting gay, a la Hugh Grant", but that's not what we have. Chandler was very observant and paid a lot of attention to clothes and furnishing, but I think a much better case can be made that he simply didn't much like women despite desiring them. The misogyny label really does fit......sort of.

  • @kevinrussell-jp6om
    @kevinrussell-jp6om 2 місяці тому

    Marlowe is more victim than protagonist in this, more like a punch-drunk (and long-in-tooth) pugilist than a sacrificial lamb. He is unable to extract himself from the fabric being woven. Yes, he is a Hamlet character and no hero that most would recognize. He is standing at the end (and most others are dead), but to what end? We next see him even more tired, and not even Ann Riordan is present to give us hope. Merle is dumped in Kansas.

  • @kevinrussell-jp6om
    @kevinrussell-jp6om 2 місяці тому

    Some of the stories you mentioned originally featured other guys, and some Chandler cannibalized himself and shoehorned in PM. He was an odd guy.

  • @kevinrussell-jp6om
    @kevinrussell-jp6om 2 місяці тому

    Robert Parker finished Poodle Springs. It's not as good but worth the read.

  • @kevinrussell-jp6om
    @kevinrussell-jp6om 2 місяці тому

    You guys love Chandler the way I do. Thanks. No one is like him. Many try to counterfeit him, but it never works. You can always tell which is the fake. Can't wait for your Long Goodbye recap.

  • @kevinrussell-jp6om
    @kevinrussell-jp6om 2 місяці тому

    Did you mention that in one of the stories used to splice and assemble the novel Kingsley WAS the murderer? Perhaps that's why there is that odd bit about the scarf.

  • @johncahalane7327
    @johncahalane7327 2 місяці тому

    So there was Trumpery in Scotland in the 1780s

  • @doclee8101
    @doclee8101 2 місяці тому

    Thank you for such a wonderful insight! I’m headed to Scotland next week for a much anticipated visit.

  • @johnnysins6110
    @johnnysins6110 3 місяці тому

    ye nah lad more boring that watching a bullfrog digest a tadpole

  • @diana.po.
    @diana.po. 3 місяці тому

    Really loved the analysis and commentaries of her work, but I can't seem to find the life of Plath video. Where can we find it? thanks!

  • @kyeli77
    @kyeli77 3 місяці тому

    Amazing report (I'm using this as a source for my EPQ on Sylvia Plath lol)

  • @neotropic
    @neotropic 4 місяці тому

    "As log as it's a current and profitable issue that's being discussed it doesn't matter how it's written". wow! Spot on. You have summarized our current cultural situation. The world needs more people like you talking.

  • @jsjsbdjeial
    @jsjsbdjeial 4 місяці тому

    Hi, I just saw this video and I love your thorough analysis! I was wondering if you had any notes kind of summarizing your ideas; I'd love share them with my friends :). It's totally ok if you don't want to share, I just wanted to let you know how much I appreciated the vid!

  • @StubbyandShifu
    @StubbyandShifu 4 місяці тому

    The poor sad reviewer.

  • @gideonbaffee5370
    @gideonbaffee5370 4 місяці тому

    Am doing my PhD on Plath's ecopoetics with a chapter on Plath's Skepticism to the Techno-Industrial. The conversations that your analysis opens up on AI are very helpful in nuancing the dynamics of my argumentations. Thanks.

  • @soothingstories
    @soothingstories 4 місяці тому

    I agree, best MacBeth I have ever seen. I feel like finally we are seeing what Shakespeare meant to show us and teach us from the cautionary tale. He (they) were so advanced wondering about "mental health issues" Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased, Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow, Raze out the written troubles of the brain, And with some sweet oblivious antidote Cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff Which weighs upon the heart?

  • @reyale.
    @reyale. 4 місяці тому

    9:15

  • @tatianacazal6846
    @tatianacazal6846 4 місяці тому

    Could you tell me more details about the main character Oppenheimer in the book and in the film? Thanks

  • @towersofilium3883
    @towersofilium3883 4 місяці тому

    Finally some quality content on this work! Thank you!

  • @zoeh3372
    @zoeh3372 4 місяці тому

    Omg 😂 I think I need you guys to narrate the entire story. I was almost crying at the last part about Conseil.

  • @7349yt
    @7349yt 4 місяці тому

    Nice little ADHD moment with the fox 😂 ... oh, and thanks for the review. Sounds like a winner.

  • @Jeffhowardmeade
    @Jeffhowardmeade 4 місяці тому

    How did Steggle deal with Joan using her maiden name long after she was married? Demonstrating that the text post-dated John's lifetime pretty much puts the final nail in the coffin of this centuries-old hoax.

  • @red4070
    @red4070 4 місяці тому

    Fiennes performance blew me away and surprised me too. I thought he portrayed a mentally fragile, possibly PTSD suffering warrior. The noises of planes etc. for me were the traumatic thoughts going through Macbeth’s head. Varma for me was superb too especially in the scene with Banquo’s ghost. I didn’t get the comedy of that scene though, rather the opposite being pity for a mentally tortured man’s (all be it an experienced killer’s) suffering. Ben Turner as Macduff was a standout performance for me too.

  • @abibacon7331
    @abibacon7331 4 місяці тому

    This is so helpful thanks so much!

  • @ginger22ly
    @ginger22ly 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for your review. I thought the character of Macbeth was a little too jolly like Fiennes character from A Bigger Splash jumping in at times. I didn’t feel the angst of conscience that is central to this play. Fiennes and Varma were definitely dynamic together. Varma crackled and sizzled. The contemporary war sounds didn’t fit very well with the story plus they fought with machetes and we heard helicopters flying over head. Confused time periods. Machetes are older than swords too! Too much spectacle detracted from the gravitas of struggling conscience. Good vehicle for Fiennes and Varma though. - my two cents. If you live in Scotland you may like the war zone now take but this play is really more culturally bound and a bit of Scottish feel would have transported viewers in the US into a different realm more in keeping with the content of the actual play. I don’t really feel like watching or hearing scenes I see on TV these days. It doesn’t shine any mirror on me. Oh I forgot in addition to the captivating performance by the leads were the presentation of the witches. They seemed delightful.

  • @73Emlo
    @73Emlo 4 місяці тому

    Fox!

  • @MrAbzu
    @MrAbzu 5 місяців тому

    The full vocabulary found in the First Folio did not exist in the English lexicon until the publication of Queen Anne's World of Words in 1611. Observations. 1.Shakespeare expresses the finest sentiments of the English people so he must have been born in England. 2.Shakespeare has an easy familiarity with all things Italian so he must have grown up in Italy. 3. Shakespeare must have known many languages to have included so many foreign words in the plays. 4. Shakespeare must have been a linguist to have added some 2,000 words to the English language. So who best fits this description? Four observations about John Florio who was born in England but grew up in the shadow of Italy. 1. A strong written dedication by Leicester's Men in First Fruits by Florio, they did not talk shop, that would have been gouache. 2. No one else in the entire nation of England had a large enough vocabulary to write the published version of the First Folio except for John Florio and he only had the words in 1611 with the publication of his bilingual dictionary. 3. The Lord Cranfield letter asking for money to finish his "great and laborious work" which could only have been the First Folio because he was doing no other work in1623. 4. Unique Florio words in the First Folio which would not be in common use for 100 years. This is not to say that Florio wrote the First Folio all by himself but he was part of the genesis of the plays with Leicester's Men, he may have contributed from the sidelines for thirty odd years and then he collected his favorite plays and revised and edited them for publication in retirement. No one else has the linguistic qualifications to have written the First Folio along with a cast of hundreds of collaborators, or the usual suspects as I call them. The word Enskied only appears in two places in the English language in Elizabethan England, one is in the First Folio, the other is in John Florio's 1611 World of Words. Where does Oxford use this word in any non First Folio written context? Oxford may have read Dante but where did he write Dante? How many words are credited as being added to the English language by Oxford or Sidney or Bacon? None, they were not linguist, Shakespeare was, Florio was and is credited with contributing more than 1,500 words to the English language. You keep trying to stick a square peg in a round hole by failing to look for a linguist as the real Shakespeare. So yes, you must first write a bilingual dictionary just to have the necessary vocabulary to be able to write the First Folio. A simple test, compare all of the written words of Oxford with all of the words in the First Folio to check for overlap of word usage. An AI program should do it. I still think Oxford and Sidney were the chief collaborators. So the real Shakespeare went to a paupers grave in a plague pit, the Brits do love their fake tourist traps. Truth will out.

    • @MrAbzu
      @MrAbzu 5 місяців тому

      PS. The name John Florio never appears even once in Winkler's fine book which I thoroughly enjoyed. So, back to the cash cow versus the truth.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 4 місяці тому

      Since Florio was writing a translation dictionary from Italian to English, what would have been the point of translating words Englishmen didn't know into OTHER words they didn't know? Being the first to put a word into print isn't the same thing as creating it.

  • @robstewart8531
    @robstewart8531 5 місяців тому

    I had the privilege of knowing Helen Vendler personally and in addition her extraordinary scholarship, she was a remarkably kind and down-to-earth person. She also had a fantastic sense of humor. Thank you for this kind tribute to her.

  • @philipswain4122
    @philipswain4122 5 місяців тому

    Oh no. I read her book on Shakespeare’s sonnets. A wonderful writer and now the world is darker with her loss.

    • @earreadthis5373
      @earreadthis5373 5 місяців тому

      It is indeed. Makes me want to read her Sonnets book again

  • @ingardens
    @ingardens 5 місяців тому

    Busy reading her PPP, heartbreaking news, I love watching her sweet and gentle lectures where you can hear in her voice and see in her eyes the joy <3

    • @earreadthis5373
      @earreadthis5373 5 місяців тому

      You really can. What a fantastic body of work to leave behind, across books and recordings.

  • @philipswain4122
    @philipswain4122 5 місяців тому

    My daughter just started reading Macbeth! Such serendipity. I’ll make sure she listens to your channel

    • @earreadthis5373
      @earreadthis5373 5 місяців тому

      Great timing! I hope she enjoys

    • @philipswain4122
      @philipswain4122 5 місяців тому

      @@earreadthis5373her school is starting off with a movie. Not really my preferred intro to one of my favourite plays, but i guess they have to start somewhere. She studied Romeo & Juliette last year, but using a “ dumbed down” version. Hmm. Plus, she’s right in the midst of teenage angst. Fingers crossed she doesn’t take on Lady M’s persona.

  • @antoninima9007
    @antoninima9007 5 місяців тому

    Awesome! I just stumbled across your video, and I, like you, love anything about Shakespeare or Plath. I'm American and I hope you'll have a zoom option for your next book club. Do you have a website or something where I can get an email if it's possible?

    • @earreadthis5373
      @earreadthis5373 5 місяців тому

      Thats great to hear! No website yet but if you're on instagram I'm updating about the bookclub there - [at] earreadthis. Failing that I will make a quick video as soon as we have zoom capabilites!

    • @antoninima9007
      @antoninima9007 4 місяці тому

      @@earreadthis5373 Great! I'll keep an eye out for an update. I've heard some of your podcasts over the past week. I am glad to have found your channel. Great poetry analysis, and literature discussions on there. 😎☺

  • @Ninjastar202
    @Ninjastar202 5 місяців тому

    Armand Assante

  • @reriuqne0-ny1er
    @reriuqne0-ny1er 5 місяців тому

    The Spectator is in a race to the bottom, it is sad to see its decline from a serious publication.

  • @ContextShakespeare1740
    @ContextShakespeare1740 5 місяців тому

    Very well said. Winkler's book is as much about the taboo of discussing topics which fall outside of the accepted beliefs of academia as it is about the authorship question itself. Kamm has done himself no favours, his reaction to this is exactly the sort of reaction that Winkler is describing. The book contains many contemporary references which express that it was an open secret that the author behind the works was a hidden author. I am impressed by your level headed attitude. By the way if you would like to see my take on Twelfth Night and The Tempest please click on my icon to take you to my channel. I always discuss the dating of a play in my presentations

  • @echoselman6764
    @echoselman6764 5 місяців тому

    Brilliant!