Much Ado About Nothing
For my Shakespeare course at Covenant, I read Much Ado About Nothing today. One of the things that makes the Bard so great is that he can write a play about “nothing” and make it terribly interesting. Of course, nothing includes no less than two weddings with plenty of tricks and deceptions thrown in for good measure, but the comedic plot movement is never particularly sweeping. Something comes from nothing.
Compare this to Beckett's Waiting for Godot and one can see the difference between a great poet and a person who merely aspired. Godot says very close to nothing; Much Ado About Nothing says a great deal. Shakespeare drives language to engage the mind; Beckett seemed so obsessed with breaking down communication that precious little is communicated in his plays.
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Yesterday marked this blog's eighth year of publication. I meant to observe it then, but now will have to suffice. Thank you for reading!
Congrats on eight years! I'm still wondering how much longer the medium will last.
Thanks, Ed! Me too — I hope it keeps going. I'd hate to see blogging go away.
A show about “nothing,” you say? And I thought Seinfeld was an original…
“There is nothing new under the sun.”
So you /do/ watch Seinfeld. cool.
Hmm…