Ten ways in which Shakespeare changed the world

Ten ways in which Shakespeare changed the world

Unravel the profound impact of William Shakespeare, a literary maestro whose influence transcends time and culture. Discover ten remarkable ways his genius reshaped the world, from language and literature to philosophy and human psychology.

This week marks 400 years since the death of our national poet, William Shakespeare

Shakespeare’s characters, worlds he created, and thoughts he expressed are for all people and all time

Shakespeare’s plays are timeless classics

Othello (lust, jealousy, and betrayal), Macbeth (paranoid regicide), Romeo & Juliet (doomed love), and many of Shakespeare’s greatest plays were an instant hit with Elizabethan audiences

Psychology Shakespearean thinker: Sigmund Freud

Freud thought Shakespeare “the greatest of poets” and was always ready with apt quotations from the collected works

Refugees

Shakespeare’s handwriting in The Book of Sir Thomas More is the only surviving manuscript of the playwright’s handwriting besides legal documents in which his signature can be clearly detected.

The American Dream

Shakespeare is not just an icon of Englishness, he’s also a central feature of the American dream, in which the mirror of his great dramas gets held up to a society permanently in search of itself

Music

Shakespeare would have loved Cole Porter’s music for The Taming of the Shrew (Kiss Me Kate) and his celebrated Brush Up Your Shakespeare, a theme song for this quatercentenary.

Heritage

Two future US presidents, Jefferson and Adams, visited “the birthplace” on Henley Street and paid a shilling to see Shakespeare’s grave.

Celebrity

The Chandos Portrait, one of several contested images of Shakespeare.

Language

Shakespeare was a writer who always seemed to be able to do what he wanted with the language, marrying Anglo-Saxon, continental, and classical traditions in a weave of poetry and storytelling

Modern man

A skull presented by Victor Hugo to Sarah Bernhardt for her performance as Hamlet

History

Shakespeare, the Tudor propagandist and author of Richard III, still dominates the narrative of English history

Source

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