It’s always hilarious to see modern academics judging one of the greatest writers who ever lived.
Campus Reform reports:
Syracuse course questions whether academia should stop teaching ShakespeareSyracuse University is offering a course in the English Department this Fall, entitled “Why Shakespeare? Race in the Academy.”According to its description, the course aims to answer the question, “Should we learn Shakespeare?” Students will discuss “issues of race, empire, colonialism, and white supremacy in Shakespeare and the academy,” inspiring “powerful arguments for and against learning Shakespeare.”“By reading plays and poems alongside recent scholarship from the #ShakeRace and RaceB4Race® movements, we will critically address the questions of when, how, and why Shakespeare is taught, performed, remixed, and reclaimed,” the course description continues.RaceB4Race® advertises itself as an “ongoing conference series and professional network community by and for scholars of color working on issues of race in premodern literature, history, and culture.” According to its website, the group “centers the expertise, perspectives, and sociopolitical interests of BIPOC scholars, whose work seeks to expand critical race theory.”The course instructor, Aley O’Mara, is an English PhD candidate studying “queer asexuality in the literature of Shakespeare’s time.” According the university’s website, O’Mara’s dissertation argues that “English Reformation’s hostility toward celibacy set the stage for heterosexual marriage culture as we now know it.”“For that reason, sympathetic representations of celibacy could enact resistance to heteronormativity.”
CLICK HERE FOR FULL VERSION OF THIS STORY