Regina Schwartz

Regina Schwartz is a scholar of English literature and elements of Jewish and Christian religion.[1][2] A Professor of English and Religion at Northwestern University,[1] she has been known historically for her research and teaching on 17th-century literature (e.g., John Milton[1][2] and William Shakespeare[3]), on the Hebrew Bible, and on the interface of literature with the subjects of philosophy, law, and religion.[1][2]

  1. ^ a b c d "Regina Schwartz: Department of English - Northwestern University". www.english.northwestern.edu. Retrieved Sep 30, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c ENS Staff (August 15, 2006). "Regina Schwarz to deliver Berkeley Divinity School's 2006 Cheney Lecture". EpiscopalChurch.org. Episcopal News Service. Retrieved September 29, 2019. Editor's note: Parts of this news service report appear to have been drawn, near to verbatim, from the title subject's self-published faculty biography, and so may not be a truly independent biographical source.
  3. ^ Johnson, Chandra (April 14, 2016). "What Shakespeare is Still Teaching Us About Good and Evil 400 Years After His Death". Deseret News. Retrieved September 29, 2019. "Shakespeare's go-to place is the Bible. He inherited ideas of justice that are biblical and then dramatized them... Shakespeare continues to inform our ethical vision largely by creating characters who offend our ethical vision of what goodness is," Schwartz said.

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