Harvard's Marjorie Garber on Shakespeare

A Harvard class on Shakespeare so popular, it had to be repeated

Return to main article:

When Kenan professor of English and American literature and language Marjorie Garber taught Shakespeare to Harvard graduates at an "Alumni College" several years ago, the course was so popular that it had to be repeated. 

Garber, says Stephen Greenblatt, is one of a group of Harvard scholars—including Helen Vendler, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Elaine Scarry, and Louis Menand [not to mention Greenblatt himself]—who are "trying to repair the gap between the world of things that are read in classrooms and assigned in universities and things that are read by people who just love life and literature and who don't read only because they are assigned it." 

Readers, theatergoers, and even students who want the "pentimento, the underpainting" of what they should know about Shakespeare either in performance or in print will appreciate Garber's lucid companion to the plays, Shakespeare after All (forthcoming from Pantheon this December). It is, as she says, "an old-fashioned kind of book about Shakespeare." But only in its form. 

Drawing on the Harvard lecture course she taught from 1981 to 2003, Garber brings contemporary trends in criticism and theory, including new historical, philosophical, and cultural work, to a close reading of the plays that is a fine complement to Greenblatt's biographical genealogy of the playwright's works.

You might also like

Shakespeare and Stephen King Have a Lot in Common

Caroline Bicks, the celebrated Shakespeare scholar, studies how horror and fear work in literature. 

Radcliffe Institute Announces 2026-2027 Fellows

Scholars will tap Harvard’s intellectual resources during the coming academic year.

For This Poet, AI Is a Writing Partner

Sasha Stiles trained a chatbot on her manuscripts. Now, her poems rewrite themselves.

Most popular

Don’t Be A ‘Solo Superhero,’ Jonny Kim Tells Harvard Alumni

The astronaut, doctor, and Navy SEAL delivered keynote remarks at the University’s Alumni Day festivities.

Ronny Chieng Tells Harvard to ‘Destroy AI’ as Graduates Cheer

The comedian and The Daily Show host gave the keynote address for Class Day 2026.

Harvard Honors Its Oldest Alumni

At 97 and 101, Linda Cabot Black ’51 and William “Bill” Dubey ’46 led the way on Alumni Day.

Explore More From Current Issue

A man holding a revolver and lantern, wearing a hat and coat, appears to be walking cautiously.

Scoundrels, Then and Now

On con men, Mark Twain, and the powers of the Harvard name

Four stylized magnifying glasses arranged in a gradient background with abstract patterns.

AI Hunts For Stolen Harvard Coins

A museum curator and a computer scientist track down ancient coins taken in a legendary heist.