- All's Well That Ends Well
- Antony and Cleopatra
- As You Like It
- The Comedy of Errors
- Coriolanus
- Cymbeline
- Hamlet
- Henry IV, Part 1
- Henry IV, Part 2
- Henry V
- Henry VI, Part 1
- Henry VI, Part 2
- Henry VI, Part 3
- Henry VIII
- Julius Caesar
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- Love's Labor's Lost
- A Lover's Complaint
- Macbeth
- Measure for Measure
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- The Merry Wives of Windsor
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Much Ado About Nothing
- Othello
- Pericles
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- Richard II
- Richard III
- Romeo and Juliet
- Shakespeare's Sonnets
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- The Tempest
- Timon of Athens
- Titus Andronicus
- Troilus and Cressida
- Twelfth Night
- The Two Gentlemen of Verona
- Venus and Adonis
- The Winter's Tale
While introducing the prominent role that church—three churches, actually—played in his childhood, Trevor Noah points to the fundamental contradiction in the fact that indigenous people across the world tend to be some of the most devout Christians: they adopted their oppressors’ God in an attempt to come to terms with their oppressor. Adopting the religion of the oppressor serves two important functions: first, it allows the oppressed to gain credibility in the colonial context, whether by getting baptized and perhaps gaining some legal or moral status in the colonizers’ eyes or by getting them education and a deeper understanding of…