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Annual Patrides Lecture: Ends, Exits and the Eschaton in King Lear

Thursday 14 May 2015, 5.30PM to 6:30pm

Speaker(s): Professor Margreta de Grazia (University of Pennsylvania)

 

The department’s annual distinguished Patrides lecture, and a pre-show talk for the Jonathan Miller production of King Lear, part of the York International Shakespeare Festival.

A half century ago, Frank Kermode argued influentially that in King Lear the scriptural sense of endtime has given way to modern fictive notions of the end. And yet the eschaton is deeply embedded in the structure of Lear, not just in the plot's drawn out movement through an apocalyptic storm to a "promised end", but in smaller scenic units that problematize the exits that bring scenes to a close. But what happens to these in-built eschatological structures in performances that are resolutely secular?

Margreta de Grazia, Emerita Rosenberg Professor in the Humanities at the University of Pennsylvania, is the author of, among other titles, Shakespeare Verbatim (1991), “Hamlet” without Hamlet (2007), and Five Shakespearean Period Pieces (forthcoming).

To book free tickets: http://www.yorktheatreroyal.co.uk/event/professor_margreta_de_grazia.php#.VOLzLlY7ZuY

Location: Ron Cooke Hub Lecture Theatre, Univeristy of York

Email: brian.cummings@york.ac.uk

Telephone: 01904 323068