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Christian Shakespeare: Question Mark – talk series
5th May 2020: 8:00 pm - 9:00 pm BST
The Institute, in collaboration with Georgetown University, is holding a series of talks on ‘Christian Shakespeare: Question Mark’ as part of The Future of the Humanities Project and The Humanities Initiative.
Shakespeare and Eden: Botanical Ornament and the Book of Nature in Cymbeline – Dr. Bonnie Lander Johnson
Shakespeare’s Cymbeline is rich in botanical ornament and symbolism. Flowers and trees appear in the play’s prophesies, its funerary rituals, and its numerous domestic settings: such as the courtly garden, bedroom scenes and the pastoral world of Imogen’s Welsh cave. Cymbeline is also the most Christological of all the tragicomedies—through its providentialist narrative and its setting at the time of Christ’s birth.
In this discussion Dr. Bonnie Lander Johnson will examine the interdependence of these two features within the context of late-sixteenth century thinking about the incarnate reality of creation—what theologians describe as the Book of Nature. Drawing on printed herbals, biblical exegesis, and theories of ornament, she will argue that in Cymbeline the pre-Reformed theological poetics of the hexaemeron resurface. Reworked from within the secularized demands of the popular theater, these poetics can be seen in the prophetic language of the King as tree, in the folk flower rituals surrounding love and death, and in the Queen’s proto-scientific gardening—all of which were forms of early modern botanical practice that searched for divine truths in the ornaments of the created world.
Dr. Bonnie Lander Johnson is director of studies in English and professor in Newnham College, Cambridge University. She works on early modern theater and the histories of science and religion. She is the author of Chastity in Early Stuart Literature and Culture (2015) and the editor of Blood Matters (2018). She is currently editing The Cambridge Handbook of Literature and Plants , completing the monograph Shakespeare’s Botany and Belief, and editing a multi-volume series of prose fiction by Catholic women for Catholic University of America Press.
Professor Michael Scott is Senior Dean, Fellow of Blackfriars Hall, college adviser for postgraduate students, and a Member of the Las Casas Institute. He also serves as senior adviser to the president at Georgetown University.
This event is free and hosted on Zoom by Georgetown University. Please register here.
Tickets: Free
Contact:
Las Casas Institute with Georgetown University
lascasas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk