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The Bard and the Born Sinner
The Bard and the Born Sinner: Soliloquy
Speaking of Hamlet’s meditative ramblings, one of Shakespeare’s signature techniques is the soliloquy — a passage where a character speaks their innermost thoughts aloud, alone on stage, and directly towards the audience. Soliloquies were a chance for Shakespeare to dive into profound introspection and reveal the conflicted thoughts and philosophical debates present in the minds of his characters. Macbeth’s cynical “tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow” speech is a good examp

Zander Pivnick
Oct 4, 20253 min read
The Bard and the Born Sinner: Thematic Similarities
Beyond their shared stylistic flair, J. Cole and Shakespeare are also connected in the themes that they explore. Human nature has changed little in the past four centuries, and we still grapple with desire, envy, ambition, and spiritual fulfillment — eternal struggles that both artists hold mirrors to in their written work. J. Cole’s music often carries deep messages about self-worth, love, and mortality, just like Shakespeare’s plays and poetry. In J. Cole’s uplifting track

Zander Pivnick
Sep 6, 20252 min read
The Bard and the Born Sinner: Inventive Language
Shakespeare is often famed for his linguistic creativity. It is well known that he virtually expanded the English lexicon single handedly, with scholars claiming he coined over 1,700 new words and countless phrases still in use. His plays and sonnets are full of puns, metaphors, and turns of phrase that were genius even 450 years ago. For example, when Shakespeare wrote, “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players,” he crafted a metaphor for the roles w

Zander Pivnick
Aug 2, 20252 min read
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