Monumental Shakespeares: Remembering Shakespeare in 1916 and after

The London Shakespeare Centre at King's College London presents
A work-in-progress colloquium

Saturday 10 December 2011

Anatomy Theatre and Museum | King’s College London

How was Shakespeare ‘remembered’ in opposite hemispheres in 1916? How were memories constructed, fabricated or supplanted by acts/objects of memorialisation or commemoration of Shakespeare, in the wake of the Tercentenary? What do we mean by these categories of ‘remembering’?

Funded by the Australian Research Council, ‘Monumental Shakespeares’ is a collaborative research project, held jointly by King’s College London and the University of Western Australia, and involving researchers working in London, Perth and Sydney. The project aims to elucidate the processes of commemoration in London and in Sydney for the Shakespeare Tercentenary in 1916, an occasion that gave rise to significant debates over the best ways to memorialise England’s ‘National Poet’ in the British Isles and across the Empire.

On Saturday 10 December, we will be holding a Colloquium as part of the project. We are very pleased to welcome to King’s an exciting range of international speakers, who join the project’s own researchers for this day of discussion and exchange. The colloquium aims to open up new lines of enquiry and to extend the rapidly developing field of study that the Shakespeare Tercentenary has provoked over recent years. As well as presenting a series of papers around the topic, the colloquium will include – thanks to the generosity of the National Theatre – an exhibition space in which to view rare items relating to the research. as well as a round table discussion with leading experts in the field.

For further information about the colloquium please go to the London Shakespeare Centre website: http://www.shakespeare.kcl.ac.uk/event.html?event=68

For any queries please email shakespeare@kcl.ac.uk