Join host Dawn Monique Williams for another episode of Not Without Right: A Shakespeare in the Public Domain podcast. This week on the pod, Dawn passes the mic to Roberta and Jordyn and sits in the hot seat.We discuss the Shakespeare Theatre Association and Shakespeare Association of America Conferences I attended this year, and I geek out about the Rockstars of Shakespeare Scholarship. Roberta and Jordyn also fill us in on their TBRs and Studio A24 movie club.The Great White Bard https://amzn.to/4j8l3Nd | #adShakespeare's White Others https://amzn.to/4f0mU3H | #ad The Once and Future Sex: Going Medieval on Women's Roles in Societyhttps://amzn.to/3Ebh4QU | #adWomen in the Picture: What Culture Does with Female Bodieshttps://amzn.to/4ciPHAQ | #adBook Club Reading History https://amzn.to/40CC3D9 | #adFor bonus content, consider a paid subscription to the Blackfuturist Shakespearean https://substack.com/@dawnmoniquewilliams
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Shakespeare Scholarship - Not Without Right: Shakespeare in the Public Domain ep10
Apr 04, 2025
Not Without Right: a Shakespeare in the Public Domain Podcast
What began as a blog celebrating multicultural Shakespeare performances—and calling out those who could do better in creating real access, inclusion, and belonging—has now evolved into this companion podcast. Here, I’ll be ranting, celebrating, amplifying, and sitting down with friends and colleagues who are shaking up Shakespeare in ways that truly excite me.
As a Black woman, I used to believe Shakespeare was reserved for the privileged—a world of dusty plays, inaccessible language, and themes that felt out of reach and irrelevant. I totally get why people might feel this way. But thanks to
What began as a blog celebrating multicultural Shakespeare performances—and calling out those who could do better in creating real access, inclusion, and belonging—has now evolved into this companion podcast. Here, I’ll be ranting, celebrating, amplifying, and sitting down with friends and colleagues who are shaking up Shakespeare in ways that truly excite me.
As a Black woman, I used to believe Shakespeare was reserved for the privileged—a world of dusty plays, inaccessible language, and themes that felt out of reach and irrelevant. I totally get why people might feel this way. But thanks toListen on
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