A Deep Dive Into Julius Caesar

The Seed
Thu 19 Feb '26

Overview

Since it was first performed, Shakespeare's Julius Caesar has been hailed as a gripping exploration of power, rhetoric and politics, and remained relentlessly relevant. Join this special lecture series where Australian academics delve into the play and its history, and unpack what Shakespeare's political masterpiece tells you about your past, present and future. With Associate Professor Huw Griffiths from The University of Sydney, an expert in…

Since it was first performed, Shakespeare's Julius Caesar has been hailed as a gripping exploration of power, rhetoric and politics, and remained relentlessly relevant. Join this special lecture series where Australian academics delve into the play and its history, and unpack what Shakespeare's political masterpiece tells you about your past, present and future.

With Associate Professor Huw Griffiths from The University of Sydney, an expert in sixteenth and seventeenth-century English literature and culture, with a focus on Shakespearean drama.

Location

The Seed

1/13A Hickson Road Pier 2/3 Dawes Point NSW 2000 Australia

Get directions
Location - 1/13A Hickson Road Pier 2/3 Dawes Point NSW 2000 Australia

FAQs

Accessibility

Allows a person's carer free entry into participating venues and events

Actively welcomes people with access needs.

Caters for people who are blind or have vision loss

Caters for people who are deaf or have hearing loss

Caters for people who use a wheelchair.

Caters for people with sufficient mobility to climb a few steps but who would benefit from fixtures to aid balance. (This includes people using walking frames and mobility aids)

Employ people with disability

Have Braille and tactile signage on all information and paths of travel

Have a hearing loop

Have a step free main entrance to the building and/or reception area (includes ramps or slopes with a maximum gradient of 1:14, otherwise are too steep for wheelchairs)

Have accessible seating areas in theatrette

Have an accessible public toilet which is unlocked

Have grab rails in the bathroom

Have handrails on all your stairways

Have lifts with enough space for people using a mobility aid to enter and turn around to use the lift buttons. Buttons are at accessible height.

Have raised tactile buttons in your lifts

Have step free access to restaurant, lounge and bar

Have step free access to the conference or function room

Have step free outdoor pathways (includes picnic areas, barbecues and shelters)

Have wheelchair accessible transport options available in the general vicinity (provide information on name of the operator, phone and website link to individual providers for private vehicles, community transport train, mini vans, hire cars, buses, taxis, ferry, tram, light rail etc in your access statement)

Offer a range of contact methods for receiving complaints

Offer multiple options for booking - web, email, phone

Provide digital communication materials (hard copy information is also available on line)

Provide seating in common areas including reception area

Train your staff in disability awareness

Website meets WCAG 2.0 accessibility standards

Welcomes and assists people who have challenges with learning, communication, understanding and behaviour. (includes people with autism, intellectual disability, Down syndrome, acquired brain injury (ABI), dyslexia and dementia)