On Tuesday 27 May 2014 at 16.00 Professor Stephen Greenblatt gives a public lecture.
The Chr. Hansen Auditorie
“Kommunehospitalet”
University of Copenhagen
Øster Farimagsgade 5 Copenhagen
Abstract:
Beginning with some personal reflections on the role of stories in my own life, I will go on to reflect on our species’ urge to construct and rehearse stories. My central example will be Shakespeare’s King Lear, but I will range from the apocryphal Vita Adae et Evae to contemporary evolutionary biology.
Professor of classical philology and Director of the Danish Academy at Rome, Marianne Pade:
Stephen Greenblatt is one of the world’s leading literary theorists and Shakespeare scholars. He is often regarded as the main founder of New Historicism, a term he first used in his 1982 introduction to The Power of Forms in the English Renaissance; he himself has referred to New Historicism as ‘cultural poetics’. The approach has been one of the most influential strands of literary criticism over the last decades and has had an immense impact on English literary history.
Greenblatt has published widely on literary theory and within the fields of cultural, Renaissance and Shakespeare studies. His 2004 biography of Shakespeare, Will in the World: how Shakespeare became Shakespeare, was on the New York Times Best Seller List for nine weeks, and he has won several prestigious prizes and awards, among them the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction.
Registration here.