News

The permanent exhibition at the Folger Shakespeare Library celebrates the playwright with its world-class collection of First ...
Shakespeare maintained a wide-ranging interest in different forms of “natural philosophy,” which combined what we now call science, philosophy, and religion. Drawing on the history of science, the ...
The School Library Journal has questioned if there is still a need to teach Shakespeare. Still, she understood why so many of the teachers were “grappling” and ultimately “abandoning ...
The Scotch Plains Public Library is located at 1927 Bartle Ave. For more information or to register, visit www.scotlib.org, email [email protected], or call 908-322-5007, ext. 204.
For decades, the library’s 82 copies of Shakespeare’s First Folio — the largest collection in the world — were locked away in a vault, with access granted only to select scholars.
Orem Public Library is hosting its Shakespeare for Kids event, a weekly event that introduces young children to the bard’s plays every week throughout the month of June.
The British Library has identified Shakespeare’s hand in the pages of the play ‘Sir Thomas More’ through the writing itself and the spelling, vocabulary, the imagery used and the ideas he ...
The Scotch Plains Public Library is hosting “Shakespeare for Fun! A Playful Afternoon of Readings” on Saturday, March 8 at 2 ...
The writer is chair of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Artists from different disciplines coming into schools and attempting to boost an element of children’s education is nothing new.
A new drive to increase the appreciation of Shakespeare in a new generation of students will be unveiled by the Government today. Pupils ranging from primary to secondary school age will be ...
Most high school English teachers adore William Shakespeare’s works. Dana Dusbiber does not. In an essay published this month on a Washington Post education blog, the Luther Burbank High School ...
The Scotch Plains Public Library invites the community to an evening of Shakespeare readings at 7 p.m. on April 24. Attendees are welcome to bring their favorite Shakespearean monologue or scene ...