
New Books Network David Womersley, "Thinking Through Shakespeare" (Princeton UP, 2026)
Apr 28, 2026
David Womersley, Thomas Warton Professor at Oxford and noted literary critic, discusses his new book Thinking Through Shakespeare. He explores how four plays probe identity, civilization versus barbarism, political and religious power, and means versus ends. Short, lively reflections show why Shakespeare keeps prompting us to think through enduring human dilemmas.
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How A Touring Theatre Sparked The Book
- David Womersley discovered the book's angle after watching Paul Stebbings' New Theatre productions worldwide and noting strong audience connections to Shakespeare.
- Stebbings observed that mild adaptations of Shakespeare resonated across cultures in Patagonia, China, India, often as audiences' first exposure to Shakespeare.
Shakespeare As A Forensic Thinker
- Womersley frames Shakespeare as forensic: plays don't give answers but make human problems unusually visible and discussable.
- Shakespeare often wrote plays that point in opposite directions, inviting reflection rather than prescribing solutions.
Perennial Human Problems Under Cultural Surface
- Womersley rejects crude 'unchanging human nature' claims but argues for deeper, perennial human problems beneath cultural variation.
- He organizes the book around four enduring problems as plausible elements of a shared human condition.







