Thinking Through Shakespeare, with David Womersley
From Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited by Folger Shakespeare Library
March 10, 2026 · 34 min
About this episode
David Womersley discusses how Shakespeare's plays serve as a means to explore deep moral and philosophical questions.
Many readers turn to Shakespeare for the beauty of his language or the power of his stories. But in Thinking Through Shakespeare, Oxford scholar David Womersley suggests that the plays offer something else as well: a way of exploring some of the deepest questions about human life. Womersley looks at tragedies like Othello, Hamlet, Macbeth, and King Lear to show how Shakespeare places audiences inside difficult moral and philosophical problems. The plays raise questions about identity, power, and the tension between doing what is right and doing what is personally advantageous. Rather than presenting clear answers, Shakespeare lets these ideas collide on stage. In this episode, Womersley explains how Shakespeare’s plays become what he calls “crucibles” for thinking. As characters struggle with competing values and impossible choices, audiences go on that journey with them—testing ideas, reconsidering assumptions, and confronting the same enduring dilemmas that have shaped human thought for centuries.
People in this episode
Guest: David Womersley
Topics covered
- Shakespeare
- philosophy
- morality
- identity
- power
Keywords
- tragedy
- Othello
- Hamlet
- Macbeth
- King Lear
Mentioned in this episode
Books & works: Thinking Through Shakespeare, Othello
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