
Shakespeare's Restless World 12. Sex and the City
May 1, 2012
A deep dive into Venice as a glittering trade hub and model for England's commercial dreams. Discussion of a 400-year-old Venetian goblet reveals global materials, export markets and drinking culture. The city's social mixing and ambiguous status of women are linked to tensions in Shakespearean drama. Venice is presented as a place of luxury, freedom and moral danger.
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Venice As The Metropolis Of Possibility
- Venice was Shakespeare's imagined metropolis of wealth, fashion and dangerous pleasure, the trading capital of Europe.
- Neil MacGregor links Venice's global commerce to its cultural image as a place of intoxicating possibility.
A Goblet That Speaks Of Venice
- Neil MacGregor describes holding a 400-year-old Venetian glass with a gilded rim and a flirtatious painted woman.
- The object vividly connected Shakespeare's audience to Venice's refined, sensual pleasures.
Luxury Objects Reveal Global Trade
- Venetian cristallo glass required globally sourced materials, showing Venice's international supply chains.
- The goblet's pigments and gold reveal trade links from Syria, Germany, Cornwall and Africa.
