Sunday, 16 March 2008

End of Term

Believe it or not, teaching is officially over at the London School of Economics and Political Science!!! My gosh how quickly time goes by. I have a total of 5 exams to sit in June plus my dissertation. The timetable is not yet ready but I am hoping that they are nicely spread out.

I am ready to write my dissertation the title of which is Cross-National Policy Transfer: Agencification in Jamaica, 1996 - 2006. It will critically evaluate the reasons for transfer of policy ideas, particularly civil service reform policy, from the North to the South by looking at agencification.

I am presently working on a Case Study on e-government in Jamaica, the Jamaica Trade Point in particular - 5000 words; and 2 essays of 2,500 words each. All these are due before exams!!

Well talk about having nightmares - sleep is secondary right now. At times after reading, I go to take a nap and a thought comes to mind and I just can't sleep until I get up to put it on the computer.

Monday, 10 March 2008

Shakespeare's Church

The Collegiate Church of the Holy and Undivided Trinity, Stratford-upon-Avon, is often known simply as Shakespeare's Church, due to its fame as the place of baptism and burial of William Shakespeare. The present building dates from 1210 and is built on the site of a Saxon monastery. It is Stratford's oldest building, in a striking position on the banks of the River Avon, and has long been England's most visited parish church. It was originally Roman Catholic but is now an Anglican Church.

Holy Trinity contains many interesting features, including:
A 14th-century sanctuary knocker in the church's porch (built c. 1500)
Twenty-six miser cord seats in the chancel, with religious, secular and mythical carvings
Several large stained glass windows featuring major English and Biblical saints at the church's east and west ends

The carved scenes of the life of Jesus around Balsall's tomb were mutilated during the Reformation, as were most images of Christ. Notable 'survivors' include a remarkable face of Christ or possibly God the Father within a sedilia canopy, and some beautiful medieval stained glass depicting the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ and the Day of Pentecost. The pre-reformation stone altar slab or mensa was found hidden beneath the floor in Victorian times and has now been re-instated as the High Altar.

The church is open to visitors for much of the year. A small contribution is requested to access the chancel and sanctuary in which Shakespeare is buried. Holy Trinity is a member of the Greater Churches Group. Holy Trinity Church enjoys good relations with other institutions within the town including King Edward VI Grammar School, Shakespeare's School, the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, Shakespeare Institute and the Royal Shakespeare Company, the RSC, who performed Henry VIII in the church in 2006 as part of the Complete Works Festival. It is an active parish church serving a parish of some 17,000 people. Services are open to all.

Shakespeare

William Shakespeare, poet and playwright, was baptised in Holy Trinity on 26 April 1564 and was buried there on 25 April 1616. The church still possesses the original Elizabethan register giving details of his baptism and burial, though it is kept by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust for safekeeping. He is buried in the beautiful 15th-century chancel built by Thomas Balsall, Dean of the Collegiate Church, who was buried within it in 1491.

Shakespeare would have come to Holy Trinity every week when he was in town, i.e. all through his childhood and on his return to live at New Place. His wife Anne Hathaway is buried next to him along with his eldest daughter Susanna. The church witnessed a sad episode shortly before Shakespeare's death. The day after Shakespeare signed his Last Will and Testament on 25 March 1616 in a 'shaky hand', William's son-in-law, Thomas Quiney was found guilty in the church court of fathering an illegitimate son by a Margaret Wheler who had recently died in childbirth. Quiney was ordered to do public penance within the church. The distress and shame for the Shakespeare family must have been immense. Within a month Shakespeare was dead and his funeral and burial being held at Holy Trinity on 25 April 1616.
It is said that Shakespeare's body is buried 20 feet (approx. 7 metres) deep to prevent its theft. Above the grave, a badly eroded stone slab displays his epitaph:
Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear,
To dig the dust enclosèd here.
Blest be the man that spares these stones,
But cursed be he that moves my bones.







Sunday, 9 March 2008

Shakespeare's Village

Stratford-upon-Avon is an historic town on the river Avon in the English county of Warwickshire, best known as the home town of the great English playwright and poet, William Shakespeare. Today, it is a major theater-going destination as the home of the Royal Shakespeare Company. As such, it represents one of the most popular tourist destinations in the country. I am told it attracts 3 million visitors each year. Stratford-upon-Avon has its origins in the Saxon culture of medieval England (the name "straet-ford" indicates that it was a river crossing). For many centuries it was little more than a small market town on the road to London; even today, it has only 24,000 permanent residents. Though it has developed some industrial capacity, Stratford is now known mostly for its association with Shakespeare. The city benefits tremendously from the resulting tourism and cultural activity, and has gone to great lengths to preserve those buildings that have survived since Shakespeare's time. As a result the center of town is quaint and attractive. On Sunday, March 09, 2008, the LSE Run Society had a trip to the site and I was happy to have been able to make it. Enjoy the pics!







Shakespeare's birth place