Leonard Barkan, "Reading Shakespeare Reading Me"

Department: New Swan Shakespeare Center

Date and Time: January 28, 2022 | 12:00 PM-1:30 PM

Event Location: Zoom

Event Details


Leonard Barkan, Reading Shakespeare Reading Me
Professor Leonard Barkan (Princeton University) will share his new book, "Reading Shakespeare Reading Me" (Fordham University Press, 2022).

Zoom registration

A gripping, funny, joyful account of how the books you read shape your own life in surprising and profound ways.


Bookworms know what scholars of literature are trained to forget: that when they devour a work of literary fiction, whatever else they may be doing, they are reading about themselves. Read Shakespeare, and you become Cleopatra, Hamlet, or Bottom. Or at the very least, you experience the plays as if you are in a small room alone with them, and they are speaking to you, to your life, to your sensibility. Drawing on fifty years as a Shakespearean, Leonard Barkan has produced a captivating book that traces the surprising and profound ways reading, teaching, acting, directing, and writing about Shakespeare has informed and shaped his life.

Leonard Barkan is the Class of 1943 University Professor at Princeton, where he teaches in the Department of Comparative Literature along with appointments in the Departments of Art and Archaeology, English, and Classics. He has been a professor of English and of Art History at universities including Northwestern, Michigan, and N.Y.U. Among his books are The Gods Made Flesh: Metamorphosis and the Pursuit of Paganism (Yale, 1986) and Unearthing the Past: Archaeology and Aesthetics in the Making of Renaissance Culture (Yale, 1999), which won prizes from the Modern Language Association, the College Art Association, the American Comparative Literature Association, Architectural Digest, and Phi Beta Kappa.