Skip to main content

SLLL

  • Home
  • People
    • Executive
    • Academics
    • Professional staff
    • Visitors
    • Current HDR students
    • Graduated HDR students
    • Alumni
  • Events
    • Event series
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
  • News
    • Media library
  • Students
    • Study with us
      • Undergraduate study
      • Graduate coursework
      • Higher degree by research
    • Current students
      • Honours
      • Student exchange
      • Language placement test
    • Overseas study tours
    • Language videos
    • Summer Scholars Program
  • Study options
  • Research
    • Research projects
      • Sydney Speaks Project
        • People
          • Members
          • Students
        • Dissemination
        • Corpora
    • Speech & Language Lab
  • Classics Museum
    • About
    • Classics Museum Catalogue
    • School Tours and Workshops
    • Friends of the Museum
    • Repatriation and Restitution
    • Volunteer Guides
    • Collections Management
    • Research
  • Contact us

Centres

  • Australian National Dictionary Centre
  • Centre for Australian Literary Cultures
  • Centre for Classical Studies
  • Centre for Early Modern Studies
  • Institute for Communication in Health Care

Centre for Australian Literary Cultures

Institute for Communication in Health Care

Linguistics

SLLL

Partners

  • ARC Centre of Excellence in the Dynamics of Language
  • Linguistics at ANU

Networks

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Humanities and the Arts
  • Australian National Internships Program

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeUpcoming EventsLosing The Plot: A Deep Dive Into Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar
Losing the Plot: A Deep Dive into Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar

istockphoto.com_387070028-445106012

Presented in person and online via Zoom, login details below

[…] Let us bathe our hands in Caesar’s blood
Up to the elbows and besmear our swords.
Then walk we forth, even to the marketplace,
And, waving our red weapons o’er our heads,
Let’s all cry “Peace, freedom, and liberty!”
(Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, 3.1)

In Shakespeare’s play, Brutus and the other assassins are keenly aware of their status as actors in both senses of the word. As they see it, they have followed an orderly course from plot to action to rescue Rome from a dangerous dictator. As this quote shows, they also connive at symbolic performance, seeking to turn Caesar’s blood into a costume, his body into a prop, and assassination into a play. That’s how the conspirators see it. But how do we see it? Brutus describes a group of men with blood up to their elbows waving swords and crying out ‘Peace, Freedom, Liberty’. The irony usually causes a ripple of dark laughter in the audience. As becomes clear, the conspirators have lost the plot because human bodies in Caesar’s Rome, as in Shakespeare’s London, signified in uncontrollable ways. This ‘deep dive into Julius Caesar’ for Bell Shakespeare examines the assassination of Caesar as a play within a play that compares the linear progress of thought and speech to action, with the chaotic ambivalence of how bodies make meaning.

Kate Flaherty is a Senior Lecturer in English and Drama at ANU. She researches how Shakespeare’s works play on the stage of public culture. Her sole-authored books are Ellen Terry, Shakespeare and Suffrage in Australia and New Zealand (CUP, 2025), and Ours as We Play it: Australia Plays Shakespeare (UWAP, 2011). Other articles and chapters explore aspects of 19th century Shakespeare performance such as touring, education, and gender. Her publication venues include Contemporary Theatre Review, Shakespeare Survey, New Theatre Quarterly, The Guardian, and The Conversation. Kate is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, and winner of the ANU VC’s Award for Excellence in Education.

Zoom link: https://anu.zoom.us/j/81480874806?pwd=wcefepmFY5FoqPXvnPnTif0gECD93c.1

Date & time

  • Thu 26 Mar 2026, 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm

Location

AD Hope Conference room 1.28 + online via Zoom

Speakers

  • Kate Flaherty, ANU

Event Series

English Seminar Series

Contact

  •  Amelia Dale
     Send email