Close Menu
The Baylor Lariat
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    Trending
    • Baylor graduate charged after killing cats with pellet gun, hanging bodies over utility lines
    • Baylor Football’s Alex Foster dies at 18
    • Board of Regents confirms budget, renovations, new leadership in May meeting
    • How facilities responds to storms, flooding in campus buildings
    • Welcome Week leaders now paid in hopes of increasing numbers
    • 5 Baylor sports storylines to look forward to in 2025-26
    • Castle’s grand slam lifts baseball to 30th win of season 10-7
    • What to Do in Waco: Summer Edition
    • About us
      • Spring 2025 Staff Page
      • Copyright Information
    • Contact
      • Contact Information
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Subscribe to The Morning Buzz
      • Department of Student Media
    • Employment
    • PDF Archives
    • RSS Feeds
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    The Baylor LariatThe Baylor Lariat
    Subscribe to the Morning Buzz
    Saturday, June 21
    • News
      • State and National News
        • State
        • National
      • Politics
        • 2025 Inauguration Page
        • Election Page
      • Homecoming Page
      • Baylor News
      • Waco Updates
      • Campus and Waco Crime
    • Arts & Life
      • Wedding Edition 2025
      • What to Do in Waco
      • Campus Culture
      • Indy and Belle
      • Sing 2025
      • Leisure and Travel
        • Leisure
        • Travel
          • Baylor in Ireland
      • Student Spotlight
      • Local Scene
        • Small Businesses
        • Social Media
      • Arts and Entertainment
        • Art
        • Fashion
        • Food
        • Literature
        • Music
        • Film and Television
    • Opinion
      • Editorials
      • Points of View
      • Lariat Letters
    • Sports
      • March Madness 2025
      • Football
      • Basketball
        • Men’s Basketball
        • Women’s Basketball
      • Soccer
      • Baseball
      • Softball
      • Volleyball
      • Equestrian
      • Cross Country and Track & Field
      • Acrobatics & Tumbling
      • Tennis
      • Golf
      • Pro Sports
      • Sports Takes
      • Club Sports
    • Lariat TV News
    • Multimedia
      • Video Features
      • Podcasts
        • Don’t Feed the Bears
      • Slideshows
    • Advertising
    The Baylor Lariat
    Home»News»Baylor News

    Mirrors are main player in Shakespeare works, writes professor

    By September 27, 2011 Baylor News No Comments4 Mins Read
    Dr. Maurice Hunt’s new book, “Shakespeare’s Speculative Art,” examines the playwright’s metaphorical use of mirrors to communicate the importance of reflection in Shakespeare’s work. Hunt is an English professor.Ambika Singh | Lariat Photographer
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Dr. Maurice Hunt’s new book, “Shakespeare’s Speculative Art,” examines the playwright’s metaphorical use of mirrors to communicate the importance of reflection in Shakespeare’s work. Hunt is an English professor.
    Ambika Singh | Lariat Photographer

    By Robyn Sanders
    Reporter

    “Shakespeare’s Speculative Art,” by Dr. Maurice Hunt, research professor of English at Baylor, was published this summer and examines character development in Shakespeare’s plays through the uses of “specula,” which is the Latin word for mirrors.

    “Some of the mirrors are literal, but they’re also figurative allegorical mirrors and so the speculative art is his art involving these literal and figurative mirrors,” Hunt said. “For example, early on in the book, I write about how a character’s face will be a mirror for another character to know himself in, to know himself in the face of another, or in the person of another, and I trace that particular motif through several plays.”

    The mirrors, Hunt said, are important for characters’ development of thought and self-knowledge.

    “‘Speculative’ has several dimensions. It can mean hypothetical, as well as intellectual, in addition to a reflection of an image, and so I trace it through those meanings,” Hunt said.

    An excerpt from the introduction of the states that “[i]t seems safe to say that Shakespeare and his contemporaries often had the uncomfortable thoughts about oneself similar to those that we do today in the twenty-first century when we catch glimpses of our faces in the bathroom or hall mirrors.”

    Some of the book is based on previous publications and past articles written by Hunt, who said he worked on it for two or three years while also working on other articles and essays on other topics.

    Dr. Dianna Vitanza, professor and chair of the English department, said Hunt’s book is a new take on Shakespeare.

    “He’s doing something quite different,” Vitanza said. “He’s using [the mirror] metaphorically.”

    His inspiration, Hunt said, was the realization that there was not a single book that comments about Shakespeare’s use of mirrors. However, Hunt’s publication is by no means exhaustive.

    “My book isn’t meant to be comprehensive,” Hunt said, “but it’s meant to trace the development of certain kinds of mirrors through two or three or four plays in a kind of sequence that show how the mirror developed.”

    Hunt said he doesn’t plan on requiring students to buy it for his Shakespeare classes, but he may refer to it in his lessons.

    “I use some of the ideas I discovered or arrived at in writing the book in teaching, and I don’t necessarily refer to the book when I do it, but they’re part of my lesson plans, say, for a particular play or day,” Hunt said.

    Hunt said what attracts him to Shakespeare is his genius as a thinker and a poet, which Hunt said has held his interest for many decades.

    “I enjoy how rich and complex he is as a thinker, as a philosophical thinker, and how beautiful and moving his poetry is,” Hunt said. “And he’s fun to teach. It’s fun just to read his poetry aloud in class.”

    Hunt’s other publications include “Shakespeare’s Romance of the Word,” “Shakespeare’s Labored Art,” “Shakespeare’s Religious Allusiveness: Its Play and Its Tolerance” and with six other books, including his most recent. In addition, Hunt has published an extensive list of articles and essays published in various journals over the years.

    “I’ve always got several projects I’m working on,” Hunt said. “I’m always working on several articles, essays, for journals. I’ve just about finished an essay on the topic of human worth in Shakespeare’s play ‘The Tempest.’”

    Vitanza said faculty publications advance the academic credentials of the department.

    “They want to share their insights and knowledge with colleagues,” Vitanza said. “It helps us understand literary works.”

    Dianna Vitanza Featured

    Keep Reading

    Baylor Football’s Alex Foster dies at 18

    Board of Regents confirms budget, renovations, new leadership in May meeting

    How facilities responds to storms, flooding in campus buildings

    Welcome Week leaders now paid in hopes of increasing numbers

    Liberty, justice for all: Dr. Van Gorder confronts racial oppression in new book

    Texas math teachers strengthen skills at School of Education’s academy

    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Recent Posts
    • Baylor graduate charged after killing cats with pellet gun, hanging bodies over utility lines May 30, 2025
    • Baylor Football’s Alex Foster dies at 18 May 28, 2025
    About

    The award-winning student newspaper of Baylor University since 1900.

    Articles, photos, and other works by staff of The Baylor Lariat are Copyright © Baylor® University. All rights reserved.

    Subscribe to the Morning Buzz

    Get the latest Lariat News by just Clicking Subscribe!

    Follow the Live Coverage
    Tweets by @bulariat

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    • Featured
    • News
    • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Arts and Life
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.