Shakespeare Speaker Series: The Multitudinous Folio

Location

Lincoln Recital Hall (Room 75)

Cost / Admission

Free with registration

Contact

firstfolio@pdx.edu

What is the cultural legacy of the First Folio, and how can a book that epitomizes human achievement also be an instrument of inhumanity?

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Prof. Jonathan Walker will give a keynote address that considers the undeniably profound literary and cultural value of the First Folio, while also questioning a popular view of the book’s perfection and the related notion that it is therefore an unmitigated force of good. 70 years ago, for instance, Charlton Hinman challenged the idea that surviving copies of the First Folio are exactly alike: because of the Renaissance printing practice of “stop-press correction,” whereby the printing process continued while errors were located and corrected (sometimes repeatedly), each First Folio was randomly assembled from both corrected and uncorrected printed sheets. This means that, in all likelihood, no two First Folios have ever been identical to one another. From a cultural perspective, the language of Shakespeare’s plays has for centuries been glorified as “the quintessence of Englishness and a measure of humanity itself” (Loomba and Orkin 1), making it a cornerstone of liberal education, social refinement, and artistic aspiration. And yet in India, in Australia, in New Zealand, in South Africa, and in other nations, Shakespeare has been a tool of “colonial philanthropy,” to use Emma Smith’s phrase, a calculated deployment of the English language to eradicate indigenous cultures under the guise of civilization and Christian benevolence. As we will see, these and other histories are as inseparable from the First Folio as the story of what we would have lost had it never been published in 1623.

Jonathan Walker is Principal Investigator of Shakespeare’s First Folio: 1623–2023 and Professor of English at Portland State University. He teaches and publishes on Shakespeare, Renaissance literature, gender and sexuality, and textual studies.

This talk is free and open to all. Please reserve your seat below.

Wednesday, November 8, 2023
11:00 a.m.
Lincoln Recital Hall
Portland State University
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This event is part of Shakespeare’s First Folio: 1623–2023, a public humanities project staged by Portland State University and other regional arts organizations from September 2023 through May 2024.

Shakespeare portrait with “Shakespeare’s First Folio: 1623-2023”