Chris Crosbie
@crosbie1564.bsky.social
100 followers 100 following 47 posts
Associate professor at NC State. Writing about Shakespeare & ethics (http://bit.ly/3E9UnZj). Some chess & hiking here. Revenge Tragedy & Classical Philosophy (EUP): http://bit.ly/2rjkbAc
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crosbie1564.bsky.social
Tonight! Hope to see you there, #Raleigh folks!
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Continue preparing this talk or now just watch The Hollow Crown for the rest of the day?
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Tried creating an infographic of John Rawls’ “veil of ignorance” for this talk. It’s troubling just how terrible A.I. is at visually representing “poverty.”
crosbie1564.bsky.social
@page158books.bsky.social Hi Sue & Dave! Please feel free to share with your amazing network of fellow book-loving folks, if interested!
Reposted by Chris Crosbie
crosbie1564.bsky.social
For anyone teaching Shakespeare this semester: Here’s the hub of Shakespearean performances & other videos I’ve been developing over the last couple of years for teaching. Feel free to use & share it widely! sites.google.com/ncsu.edu/the...
The Shakespeare Media Archive
sites.google.com
crosbie1564.bsky.social
The case study in captioning I went with: This butchered version of an interview with Paul Robeson about Othello.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
The problem this talk aims to solve: Captioning videos that you don’t host yourself. So crucial for accessibility when using the wealth of Shakespearean material out there.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Continuing my work on communal ethics today. Subtitle of the week: “The Habit of Humility…Fetched out of the Wardrobe of Saint Paul!”
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Working on a talk on captioning Shakespeare to improve accessibility. Grateful to NCSU’s Delta Faculty Fellows program for providing the support to pursue this!
Image of Laurence Olivier as Hamlet. Caption misreads as “who would fuddles bear”.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
For anyone teaching Shakespeare this semester: Here’s the hub of Shakespearean performances & other videos I’ve been developing over the last couple of years for teaching. Feel free to use & share it widely! sites.google.com/ncsu.edu/the...
The Shakespeare Media Archive
sites.google.com
Reposted by Chris Crosbie
bkadams.bsky.social
For those of you going to Denver’s SAA, please consider joining @roaringgirle.bsky.social and me to talk about the importance of public libraries, Shakespeare, and other early modern literature. There’s so much to consider in our current political climate:
[ SEMINAR • SAA 2026 ]
SHAKESPEARE & PUBLIC LIBRARIES
This seminar examines the role of public libraries (local, national and international) in the preservation, dissemination, and study of the books and other media that transmit works by Shakespeare and other early modern writers. The recent identification of two books once owned by John Milton—a Shakespeare First Folio and a copy of Holinshed's Chronicles-at two American public libraries (The Free Library of Philadelphia and the Phoenix Public Library, respectively) and the presence of another of Milton's books (a sammelband of early Italian editions) at a third (The New York Public Library) invites us to acknowledge and rethink an implicit bias towards well-funded elite libraries and collections as privileged sites of textual and historical research. How might our knowledge of early modern textual history and the history of early modern books in the longue durée change with greater consideration of public collections? What do (and could) scholarly partnerships with public libraries look like-and what can they achieve in terms of bolstering the value of humanistic inquiry? How might the histories of (and transmitted by) the early modern books in these collections, which we are uniquely positioned to tell, relate to the specific local communities that they serve? In this way, the seminar is also interested in the ways that public libraries feature Shakespeare in the promotion of their circulating collections, educational programming, and public events, as many U.S. public libraries did during the quatercentenaries of Shakespeare's death in 2016 and of the publication of the first folio in 2023. While the idea for this seminar emerges from our experiences working in American public libraries, we would welcome contributions from scholars and librarians considering the role of public libraries in Shakespeare and early modern studies in various different regional and national traditions.
Reposted by Chris Crosbie
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Just did some prep work with Anita for this today. Do come join us! We hope for a friendly, robust conversation in Denver this spring.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Going to #Shax2026? Come chat about ethics & the early modern theater with Anita Sherman and me!
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Just did some prep work with Anita for this today. Do come join us! We hope for a friendly, robust conversation in Denver this spring.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Going to #Shax2026? Come chat about ethics & the early modern theater with Anita Sherman and me!
crosbie1564.bsky.social
lol I knew I’d get called out on that!
crosbie1564.bsky.social
It’s been brought to my attention that I’ve been enjoying Jeffrey Knapp’s *Shakespeare’s Tribe* too much. I regret the error.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Admittedly a weird way to pass a beautiful summer day, but I’ve enjoyed wandering around Aristotle’s Ethics yet again…
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Early modern religious history folks, I seek recommendations!  I'm writing a short bit in my book about the idea one may kneel in front of an icon if one’s intent isn’t idolatrous, or is just to keep peace w/ one’s neighbor. What criticism have you found helpful in this ballpark?
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Working with Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age for the chapter I’m working on & deeply enjoy/envy the sense of casual brilliance on display here.
Reposted by Chris Crosbie
amylidster.bsky.social
My (long!) article on ‘Shakespeare and War’ for Oxford Bibliographies has just been published!

It covers Shakespeare’s time through centuries of reception history & I hope is useful for research on this multifaceted, diverse & (alas) timely topic

www.oxfordbibliographies.com/display/docu...
www.oxfordbibliographies.com
Reposted by Chris Crosbie
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Going to #Shax2026? Come chat about ethics & the early modern theater with Anita Sherman and me!
crosbie1564.bsky.social
Going to #Shax2026? Come chat about ethics & the early modern theater with Anita Sherman and me!
Reposted by Chris Crosbie
crosbie1564.bsky.social
If anyone has clips of early modern performances not included here & that have worked well in the classroom, please let me know! I hope to add a few new ones over the summer as I can.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
For any of the #Shax2025 & #RSA2025 folks who might find this useful, here’s the hub of Shakespearean performances & other videos I’ve been developing over the last couple of years for teaching. Feel free to use & share it widely! sites.google.com/ncsu.edu/the...
The Shakespeare Media Archive
sites.google.com
crosbie1564.bsky.social
If anyone has clips of early modern performances not included here & that have worked well in the classroom, please let me know! I hope to add a few new ones over the summer as I can.
crosbie1564.bsky.social
For any of the #Shax2025 & #RSA2025 folks who might find this useful, here’s the hub of Shakespearean performances & other videos I’ve been developing over the last couple of years for teaching. Feel free to use & share it widely! sites.google.com/ncsu.edu/the...
The Shakespeare Media Archive
sites.google.com