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  1. Há 1 dia · William Shakespeare (c. 23 April 1564 – 23 April 1616) was an English playwright, poet, and actor. He is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon" (or simply "the Bard").

  2. Há 1 dia · Shakespeare‘s distortion of history had a huge impact on Richard III‘s reputation. For centuries after the play was written, the hunchbacked, murderous villain became the dominant image of the king in the popular imagination, from David Garrick‘s crazed performance in the 18th century to Laurence Olivier‘s suave Machiavel in his 1955 film.

  3. Há 3 dias · An essential tool for anyone engaged in research on Shakespeare or early modern England. Search international Shakespeare scholarship including articles, books, chapters, dissertations, editions, adaptations, and digital projects.

  4. Há 5 dias · In Doctor Faustus, the greatest tragedy in English before Shakespeare, Marlowe puts some of the finest poetry ever written for the stage and a good deal of anarchic comedy at the service of a mythic tale illustrating mankind's insatiable desire for knowledge and power.

  5. Há 5 dias · Dr. Bloom is best known perhaps for his work on Shakespeare, most especially Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human (1998). To offer credit where such is indubitably due, Dr. Bloom defends the Bard from those cultural vivisectionists who take Shakespeare’s living work and kill it with the weapons of idolatrous ideology.

  6. Há 3 dias · This video delves into the evolution of humans, starting with abiogenesis—the emergence of life from non-life—possibly in volcanic ocean vents. It introduces LUCA, the last universal common ancestor. While human evolution, including big brains and bipedalism, is well-understood, the leap to self-consciousness is still a mystery. Some ...

  7. Há 3 dias · From Italy the new humanist spirit and the Renaissance it engendered spread north to all parts of Europe, aided by the invention of the mechanized printing press, which allowed literacy and the availability of Classical texts to grow explosively.