Marjorie Garber explores Shakespeare’s impact on modern culture

Shakespearean scholar and cultural critic Marjorie Garber will present the Helen Clanton Morrin Lecture for the Washington University Assembly Series at 4 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 23 in Edison Theatre. Her talk, “Bartlett’s Familiar Shakespeare: The Pleasures and Pitfalls of Quotations,” will focus on the great bard’s influence on modern life.

Marjorie Garber
Marjorie Garber

Garber’s visit will coincide with a production of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, presented by the Performing Arts Department (PAD) in Arts & Sciences Feb. 24 to March 5.

The talk is free and open to the public and is sponsored by the PAD and the Assembly Series, as well as by the Center for the Humanities, Comparative Literature and the Interdisciplinary Project in the Humanities, all in Arts & Sciences. Edison Theatre is located in the Mallinckrodt Student Center. For more information, call (314) 935-4620 or visit the Assembly Series Web page (http://assemblyseries.wustl.edu).

Shakespeare is a familiar acquaintance for Garber; she has authored four books devoted to his body of work. Her most recent book, Shakespeare After All, is an ambitious study that makes Shakespeare more accessible to the common reader. This comprehensive critical guide to all 38 plays was chosen by Newsweek as one of the ten best nonfiction books of 2004 as well as the 2005 Christian Gauss Book Award from Phi Beta Kappa. Garber uses themes from across the broad spectrum of cultural studies, such as gender studies, post-colonial theory, and Elizabethan stage history, to help her readers connect with Shakespeare’s plays.

She writes, “What is often described as the timelessness of Shakespeare, the transcendent qualities for which his plays have been praised around the world and across the centuries, is perhaps better understood as an uncanny timeliness, a capacity to speak directly to circumstances the playwright could not have anticipated or foreseen.”

Garber is known for her eclectic approach to modern cultural topics. She has written twelve books in all, many of which focus on cultural theory and cover such diverse topics as Vice Versa: Bisexuality and the Eroticism of Everyday Life, Sex and Real Estate: Why We Love Houses, and Dog Love. Her methods are unorthodox, jumping from one idea to another, liberally using pun and wordplay in her cultural analyses.

Garber serves in a number of professional capacities at Harvard University. She is the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of English and American Literature and Language and of Visual and Environmental Studies, and also chairs the department of visual and environmental studies and directs the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts. Furthermore, she serves as the president of the Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes.

CALENDAR SUMMARY

WHO: Marjorie Garber

WHAT: Helen Clanton Morrin Lecture, “Bartlett’s Familiar Shakespeare: The Pleasures and Pitfalls of Quotations”

WHEN: 4 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 23

WHERE: Edison Theatre, Mallinckrodt Student Center, 6445 Forsyth Blvd.

COST: Free

INFORMATION: (314) 935-4620