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St. John's College (Santa Fe) Lectures
Meem Library
231 episodes
1 day ago
Recordings of lectures from St. John's College, Santa Fe. Includes lectures from the Dean's Lecture & Concert Series and the Graduate Institute Summer Lecture Series.
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Education
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All content for St. John's College (Santa Fe) Lectures is the property of Meem Library and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Recordings of lectures from St. John's College, Santa Fe. Includes lectures from the Dean's Lecture & Concert Series and the Graduate Institute Summer Lecture Series.
Show more...
Education
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I Know Not Seems: Appearance, Reality, and the Grave of Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet (Kit Slover)
St. John's College (Santa Fe) Lectures
56 minutes 57 seconds
6 months ago
I Know Not Seems: Appearance, Reality, and the Grave of Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet (Kit Slover)

Audio recording of a lecture given by tutor Kit Slover on April 25, 2025 as part of the Dean’s Lecture & Concert Series. The Dean’s Office has provided this description of the event: “In the final act of Shakespeare’s Hamlet the northern prince stumbles upon the grave of Ophelia, leaps in, and declares himself to the funeral goers: ‘This is I, Hamlet the Dane’ (V.1, 279). By calling himself the Dane, Hamlet seems to identify himself as the rightful king of Denmark—as though the grave, in particular, is his sovereign territory. The grave itself was dug by a sexton who took up his profession ‘on the very day that young Hamlet was born’ (V.1, 152), which also happens to be the day ‘our last king Hamlet overcame Fortinbras’ (V.1, 148), seizing the Norwegian lands of the latter. This acquisition is familiar to us from the beginning of the play because the ghost of the former king has appeared ‘in the very armor he had on/When he the ambitious Norway combated’ (I.1, 71-71). And the appearance of this ghost has set off a chain of events resulting in the death of the women into whose grave Hamlet leaps. In this lecture, I will attempt to understand this strange scene. Why is it here, in a grave with such uncanny ties to his own birth, the ghost of his father, and the ultimate fate of Denmark that Hamlet asserts his sovereign rights? Hamlet cries, ‘This is I, Hamlet the Dane,’ but what, in short, does he mean by the word this?”

St. John's College (Santa Fe) Lectures
Recordings of lectures from St. John's College, Santa Fe. Includes lectures from the Dean's Lecture & Concert Series and the Graduate Institute Summer Lecture Series.