Undergraduate Trey Smith's work recently published in Forbes & Fifth

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Summaries

Summary Sentence:

Smith looks at contemporary autocrats through a Shakespearean lens.

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  • Trey Smith Trey Smith
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  • Forbes & Fifth Forbes & Fifth
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A second year student in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, Murry (Trey) Smith published his essay “Lear’s Tyranny in Qaddafi’s Libya” in Forbes & Fifth, a national journal for undergraduate research.

Smith approaches William Shakespeare’s political tragedy King Lear from the applied, interdisciplinary direction of contemporary political collapse. Autocrats like Syria’s Hafez al-Assad, Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe, North Korea’s Kim Jong-Il, and particularly Libya’s Muammar Qaddafi not only parallel King Lear, their erratic leadership devolves into power vacuums and civil war. By connecting King Lear’s complex exploration of tyranny, decadence, failed foreign intervention, and mental illness to modern autocrats, Smith sharpens both a 400-year old play and the 2011 Libyan Revolution.

Trey is a Dean’s List offensive lineman on the Georgia Tech football team who is particularly interested in the effect of hard power on international relations at both intrastate and interstate levels. Trey wrote the article as part of his study of the “Violence of the Law” (LMC’s Writing and Communication Program) with Dr. Sarah Higinbotham in 2014.

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School of Literature, Media, and Communication

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Status
  • Created By: Jessica Anderson
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Jan 13, 2016 - 1:18pm
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 11:20pm