Scuffles, Swagger and Shakespeare: The Hidden Story of English

Scuffles, Swagger and Shakespeare: The Hidden Story of English

Shakespeare is often credited with revolutionising English, but is the real story more complex?

0.0
2019
0h 29m
HD
Documentary

The English language is spoken by 450 million people around the globe, with a further one billion using it as a second language. It is arguably Britain’s most famous export. The man often given credit for the global triumph of English, and the invention of many of our modern words, is William Shakespeare. Shakespeare’s plays first hit the stage four centuries ago, as the explorers of Elizabethan England were laying the foundations for the British empire. It was this empire that would carry English around the world. Language historian and BBC New Generation Thinker Dr John Gallagher asks whether the real story of how English became a global linguistic superpower is more complex.

Top Cast

J

Jonathan Culpeper

Interviewed Guest

S

Simon Horobin

Interviewed Guest

F

Farah Karim-Cooper

Interviewed Guest

C

Cathy Shrank

Interviewed Guest

J

John Gallagher

Presenter

More Like This

Hamlet Within
To Be Hamlet
The Lost Media of Aaron Aaron Byrne
Mel Gibson Goes Back to School
Discovering Hamlet
Hamlet: The Actor's View
Shakespeare's Country
To Be or Not to Be: Klingons and Shakespeare
Shakespeare Country
Pendant
Antonius and Cleopatra
Macbeth
Deadly Jealousy
Jane Anger
Love's Labour's Lost
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
Garden of Eden
King Lear
A Midsummer Night's Dream
Were the World Mine