Main content

Yasmin Alibhai-Brown

Writer and journalist Yasmin Alibhai-Brown reflects on Shakespeare's transgressive love - of rebellious couples reaching out to each other across ethnic and racial barriers.

In the final essay in our series Shakespeare and Love, the writer and journalist Yasmin Alibhai-Brown recalls how her own heart was captured by Shakespeare as a child growing up in Uganda, East Africa, where his plays were performed at her school on a regular basis. Though Shakespeare may never have left England, he had a global outlook on love. Racial pride and prejudice had a strong presence in many of his plays. From Titus Andronicus and the Merchant of Venice to Othello, the plays are full of rebellious lovers; mixed race couplings whose complex lives are portrayed with such moral clarity and moral ambivalence that they resonate today.

Available now

15 minutes

Last on

Fri 27 Apr 201222:45

More episodes

Next

You are at the last episode

See all episodes from The Essay

Broadcast

  • Fri 27 Apr 201222:45

Death in Trieste

Death in Trieste

A 1760s murder still informs ideas about aesthetics, a certain sort of sex, and death.

Watch: My Deaf World

Watch: My Deaf World

Five compelling experiences of what it is like to be deaf in 21st-century Britain.

The Book that Changed Me

The Book that Changed Me

Five figures from the arts and science introduce books that changed their lives and work.

Podcast