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Shakespeare and the V&A

Shakespeare icon V&A

Monday 19 May 2014, 6.30PM

Speaker(s): Bill Sherman, Professor of Renaissance Studies (York) and Head of Research at the V&A

IPUP Public Lecture

The Victorian period saw both the elevation of Shakespeare to the status of National Poet and the creation of the Victoria & Albert Museum as the National Collection of Art and Design. At first glance these two developments have surprisingly little to do with each other, but a closer look reveals that the Bard became a pervasive presence in a museum better known for furniture than folios.

Bill Sherman’s research is driven by a love of archives and other collections, and an interest in how objects from the past (textual and otherwise) come down to us, what they pick up along the way and how they speak across periods. He has published widely on the history of books and readers, the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries, the interface between word and image and the relationship between knowledge and power.

Alongside his role in the Department of English and Related Literature Bill was Director of the Centre for Renaissance & Early Modern Studies from 2005 to 2011 and served as Associate Editor of Shakespeare Quarterly from 2001 to 2012. He has held visiting positions at Caltech, Queen Mary (London) and Keio University (Tokyo), and fellowships at the Folger, Huntington, New York Public Library, National Maritime Museum and Bard Graduate Center.

For more Public Lectures offered by the Institute for the Public Understanding of the Past (IPUP) see: www.york.ac.uk/ipup/events/public-lectures.html

Location: Bowland Lecture Theatre, Berrick Saul Building

Admission: Free, unticketed

Email: ipup-enquiries@york.ac.uk