Welcome, Friends!

Now, this is strange. After my last post, Maps of War, both my cousin’s blog and the University of Texas picked up that I had linked to them, and they both linked back to my post. I didn’t know they could do that!

So now that I’ve been outed as a blogger, I guess the time has come to go public. And I think there’s enough content here now that I can start inviting a small group of people to come and visit. If you’re one of these people, then this may be the first post you’re reading. Welcome to my blog!

What would be an appropriate introduction to Shakespeare Teacher? How about an article from The Onion that gives the site a name check?

Theater Major Has Too Long Borne Shakespeare Teacher’s Blunt Upbraidings, Bitter Scoffs

November 20, 2006 | Issue 42-47

NASHVILLE, TN-Vanderbilt University theater major Sandy Heckscher said Monday that she has been stretched to the limits of her endurance by the “blunt upbraidings and bitter scoffs” of drama professor and Shakespeare scholar Ian Treatt. “Who breathes but’d rather be a simple whore, than lurk within this country of insult?” said Heckscher, who thinks Treatt is a “bad grader.” “O monstrous beast! How like a swine he lies! Grim death – that foul and loathsome moniker!” Treatt responded to the charges by saying only that he found himself amazed that theater majors “are too simple/To offer war where they should kneel for peace.”

Enjoy the rest of the blog, and if you find a post or two that speaks to you, feel free to speak back and leave a comment behind, so I’ll know you’ve been here.

5 Responses to “Welcome, Friends!”

  1. dan Says:

    Thanks for inviting me to check out your blog, Shakespeare teacher. I’d be curious to know some insight regarding how you became so passionate about Shakespeare.

  2. Bill Says:

    Hey, Dan, thanks for visiting. I was lukewarm about Shakespeare in high school, but I got a chance to act in Twelfth Night my freshman year in college. I was hesitant at first, but after doing the same lines night after night they started to sink in, and one day it just clicked. Then I played Bottom in A Midsummer Night’s Dream my junior year, and I was hooked for life. The real lesson for me was that Shakespeare, and everything else really, is best learned by active engagement rather than the more traditional methods of instruction.

  3. University Update Says:

    Welcome, Friends!…

  4. cynthia Says:

    then must you blog…of one that blogg’d not wisely

  5. Bill Says:

    …a blog told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

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