81- ) English Literature
William Shakespeare
Questions of authorship
Readers
and playgoers in Shakespeare’s own lifetime, and indeed until the late 18th
century, never questioned Shakespeare’s authorship of his plays. He was a
well-known actor from Stratford who performed in London’s premier acting
company, among the great actors of his day. He was widely known by the leading
writers of his time as well, including Ben Jonson and John Webster, both of
whom praised him as a dramatist. Many other tributes to him as a great writer
appeared during his lifetime. Any theory that supposes him not to have been the
writer of the plays and poems attributed to him must suppose that Shakespeare’s
contemporaries were universally fooled by some kind of secret arrangement.
Yet
suspicions on the subject gained increasing force in the mid-19th century. One
Delia Bacon proposed that the author was her claimed ancestor Sir Francis
Bacon, Viscount St. Albans, who was indeed a prominent writer of the
Elizabethan era. What had prompted this theory? The chief considerations seem
to have been that little is known about Shakespeare’s life (though in fact more
is known about him than about his contemporary writers), that he was from the
country town of Stratford-upon-Avon, that he never attended one of the
universities, and that therefore it would have been impossible for him to write
knowledgeably about the great affairs of English courtly life such as we find
in the plays.
The
theory is suspect on a number of counts. University training in Shakespeare’s
day centred on theology and on Latin, Greek, and Hebrew texts of a sort that
would not have greatly improved Shakespeare’s knowledge of contemporary English
life. By the 19th century, a university education was becoming more and more
the mark of a broadly educated person, but university training in the 16th
century was quite a different matter. The notion that only a
university-educated person could write of life at court and among the gentry is
an erroneous and indeed a snobbish assumption. Shakespeare was better off going
to London as he did, seeing and writing plays, listening to how people talked.
He was a reporter, in effect. The great writers of his era (or indeed of most
eras) are not usually aristocrats, who have no need to earn a living by their
pens. Shakespeare’s social background is essentially like that of his best
contemporaries. Edmund Spenser went to Cambridge, it is true, but he came from
a sail-making family. Christopher Marlowe also attended Cambridge, but his
kindred were shoemakers in Canterbury. John Webster, Thomas Dekker, and Thomas
Middleton came from similar backgrounds. They discovered that they were
writers, able to make a living off their talent, and they (excluding the poet Spenser)
flocked to the London theatres where customers for their wares were to be
found. Like them, Shakespeare was a man of the commercial theatre.
Other
candidates—William Stanley, 6th earl of Derby, and Christopher Marlowe among
them—have been proposed, and indeed the very fact of so many candidates makes
one suspicious of the claims of any one person. The late 20th-century candidate
for the writing of Shakespeare’s plays, other than Shakespeare himself, was
Edward de Vere, 17th earl of Oxford. Oxford did indeed write verse, as did
other gentlemen; sonneteering was a mark of gentlemanly distinction. Oxford was
also a wretched man who abused his wife and drove his father-in-law to
distraction. Most seriously damaging to Oxford’s candidacy is the fact that he
died in 1604. The chronology presented here, summarizing perhaps 200 years of
assiduous scholarship, establishes a professional career for Shakespeare as
dramatist that extends from about 1589 to 1614. Many of his greatest plays—King
Lear, Antony and Cleopatra, and The Tempest, to name but three—were written
after 1604. To suppose that the dating of the canon is totally out of whack and
that all the plays and poems were written before 1604 is a desperate argument.
Some individual dates are uncertain, but the overall pattern is coherent. The
growth in poetic and dramatic styles, the development of themes and subjects,
along with objective evidence, all support a chronology that extends to about
1614. To suppose alternatively that Oxford wrote the plays and poems before
1604 and then put them away in a drawer, to be brought out after his death and
updated to make them appear timely, is to invent an answer to a nonexistent
problem.
When
all is said, the sensible question one must ask is, why would Oxford want to
write the plays and poems and then not claim them for himself? The answer given
is that he was an aristocrat and that writing for the theatre was not elegant;
hence he needed a front man, an alias. Shakespeare, the actor, was a suitable
choice. But is it plausible that a cover-up like this could have succeeded?
Shakespeare’s
contemporaries, after all, wrote of him unequivocally as the author of the
plays. Ben Jonson, who knew him well, contributed verses to the First Folio of
1623, where (as elsewhere) he criticizes and praises Shakespeare as the author.
John Heminge and Henry Condell, fellow actors and theatre owners with
Shakespeare, signed the dedication and a foreword to the First Folio and
described their methods as editors. In his own day, therefore, he was accepted
as the author of the plays. In an age that loved gossip and mystery as much as
any, it seems hardly conceivable that Jonson and Shakespeare’s theatrical
associates shared the secret of a gigantic literary hoax without a single leak
or that they could have been imposed upon without suspicion. Unsupported
assertions that the author of the plays was a man of great learning and that
Shakespeare of Stratford was an illiterate rustic no longer carry weight, and
only when a believer in Bacon or Oxford or Marlowe produces sound evidence will
scholars pay close attention.
Linguistic,
historical, textual, and editorial problems
Since
the days of Shakespeare, the English language has changed, and so have
audiences, theatres, actors, and customary patterns of thought and feeling.
Time has placed an ever-increasing cloud before the mirror he held up to life,
and it is here that scholarship can help.
Problems
are most obvious in single words. In the 21st century, presently, for instance,
does not mean “immediately,” as it usually did for Shakespeare, or will mean
“lust,” or rage mean “folly,” or silly denote “innocence” and “purity.” In
Shakespeare’s day, words sounded different, too, so that ably could rhyme with
eye or tomb with dumb. Syntax was often different, and, far more difficult to
define, so was response to metre and phrase. What sounds formal and stiff to a
modern hearer might have sounded fresh and gay to an Elizabethan.
Ideas
have changed, too, most obviously political ones. Shakespeare’s contemporaries
almost unanimously believed in authoritarian monarchy and recognized divine
intervention in history. Most of them would have agreed that a man should be
burned for ultimate religious heresies. It is the office of linguistic and
historical scholarship to aid the understanding of the multitude of factors
that have significantly affected the impressions made by Shakespeare’s plays.
None
of Shakespeare’s plays has survived in his handwritten manuscript, and, in the
printed texts of some plays, notably King Lear and Richard III, there are
passages that are manifestly corrupt, with only an uncertain relationship to
the words Shakespeare once wrote. Even if the printer received a good
manuscript, small errors could still be introduced. Compositors were less than
perfect; they often “regularized” the readings of their copy, altered
punctuation in accordance with their own preferences or “house” style or
because they lacked the necessary pieces of type, or made mistakes because they
had to work too hurriedly. Even the correction of proof sheets in the printing
house could further corrupt the text, since such correction was usually
effected without reference to the author or to the manuscript copy; when both
corrected and uncorrected states are still available, it is sometimes the
uncorrected version that is preferable. Correctors are responsible for some
errors now impossible to right.
Literary criticism
During
his own lifetime and shortly afterward, Shakespeare enjoyed fame and
considerable critical attention. The English writer Francis Meres, in 1598,
declared him to be England’s greatest writer in comedy and tragedy. Writer and
poet John Weever lauded “honey-tongued Shakespeare.” Ben Jonson, Shakespeare’s
contemporary and a literary critic in his own right, granted that Shakespeare
had no rival in the writing of comedy, even in the ancient Classical world, and
that he equaled the ancients in tragedy as well, but Jonson also faulted
Shakespeare for having a mediocre command of the Classical languages and for
ignoring Classical rules. Jonson objected when Shakespeare dramatized history
extending over many years and moved his dramatic scene around from country to
country, rather than focusing on 24 hours or so in a single location.
Shakespeare wrote too glibly, in Jonson’s view, mixing kings and clowns, lofty
verse with vulgarity, mortals with fairies.
Seventeenth
century
Jonson’s
Neoclassical perspective on Shakespeare was to govern the literary criticism of
the later 17th century as well. John Dryden, in his essay “Of Dramatick Poesie”
(1668) and other essays, condemned the improbabilities of Shakespeare’s late
romances. Shakespeare lacked decorum, in Dryden’s view, largely because he had
written for an ignorant age and poorly educated audiences. Shakespeare excelled
in “fancy” or imagination, but he lagged behind in “judgment.” He was a native
genius, untaught, whose plays needed to be extensively rewritten to clear them
of the impurities of their frequently vulgar style. And in fact most
productions of Shakespeare on the London stage during the Restoration did just
that: they rewrote Shakespeare to make him more refined.
Eighteenth
century
This
critical view persisted into the 18th century as well. Alexander Pope undertook
to edit Shakespeare in 1725, expurgating his language and “correcting”
supposedly infelicitous phrases. Samuel Johnson also edited Shakespeare’s works
(1765), defending his author as one who “holds up to his readers a faithful
mirror of manners and of life”; but, though he pronounced Shakespeare an
“ancient” (supreme praise from Johnson), he found Shakespeare’s plays full of
implausible plots quickly huddled together at the end, and he deplored
Shakespeare’s fondness for punning. Even in his defense of Shakespeare as a
great English writer, Johnson lauded him in classical terms, for his
universality, his ability to offer a “just representation of general nature”
that could stand the test of time.
Romantic
critics
For
Romantic critics such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge in the early 19th century,
Shakespeare deserved to be appreciated most of all for his creative genius and
his spontaneity. For Goethe in Germany as well, Shakespeare was a bard, a
mystical seer. Most of all, Shakespeare was considered supreme as a creator of
character. Maurice Morgann wrote such character-based analyses as appear in his
book An Essay on the Dramatic Character of Sir John Falstaff (1777), where
Falstaff is envisaged as larger than life, a humane wit and humorist who is no
coward or liar in fact but a player of inspired games. Romantic critics,
including Charles Lamb, Thomas De Quincey (who wrote Encyclopædia Britannica’s
article on Shakespeare for the eighth edition), and William Hazlitt, extolled
Shakespeare as a genius able to create an imaginative world of his own, even if
Hazlitt was disturbed by what he took to be Shakespeare’s political
conservatism. In the theatre of the Romantic era, Shakespeare fared less well,
but as an author he was much touted and even venerated. In 1769 the famous
actor David Garrick had instituted a Shakespeare Jubilee at Stratford-upon-Avon
to celebrate Shakespeare’s birthday. Shakespeare had become England’s national
poet.
Twentieth
century and beyond
Increasing
importance of scholarship
The
late 19th and early 20th centuries saw major increases in the systematic and
scholarly exploration of Shakespeare’s life and works. Philological research
established a more reliable chronology of the work than had been hitherto
available. Edward Dowden, in his Shakspere: A Critical Study of His Mind and
Art (1875), analyzed the shape of Shakespeare’s career in a way that had not
been possible earlier. A.C. Bradley’s magisterial Shakespearean Tragedy (1904),
a book that remains highly readable, showed how the achievements of scholarship
could be applied to a humane and moving interpretation of Shakespeare’s
greatest work. As in earlier studies of the 19th century, Bradley’s approach
focused largely on character.
Historical
criticism
Increasingly
in the 20th century, scholarship furthered an understanding of Shakespeare’s
social, political, economic, and theatrical milieu. Shakespeare’s sources came
under new and intense scrutiny. Elmer Edgar Stoll, in Art and Artifice in
Shakespeare (1933), stressed the ways in which the plays could be seen as
constructs intimately connected with their historical environment. Playacting
depends on conventions, which must be understood in their historical context.
Costuming signals meaning to the audience; so does the theatre building, the
props, the actors’ gestures.
Accordingly,
historical critics sought to know more about the history of London’s theatres
(as in John Cranford Adams’s well-known model of the Globe playhouse or in C.
Walter Hodges’s The Globe Restored [1953]), about audiences (Alfred Harbage, As
They Liked It [1947]; and Ann Jennalie Cook, The Privileged Playgoers of
Shakespeare’s London, 1576–1642 [1981]), about staging methods (Bernard
Beckerman, Shakespeare at the Globe 1599–1609 [1962]), and much more. Other
scholarly studies examined censorship, the religious controversies of the
Elizabethan era and how they affected playwriting, and the heritage of native
medieval English drama. Studies in the history of ideas have examined
Elizabethan cosmology, astrology, philosophical ideas such as the Great Chain
of Being, physiological theories about the four bodily humours, political
theories of Machiavelli and others, the skepticism of Montaigne, and much more.
See also Sidebar: Shakespeare on Theatre; Sidebar: Shakespeare and the
Liberties; Sidebar: Music in Shakespeare’s Plays.
New
Criticism
As
valuable as it is, historical criticism has not been without its opponents. A
major critical movement of the 1930s and ’40s was the so-called New Criticism
of F.R. Leavis, L.C. Knights, Derek Traversi, Robert Heilman, and many others,
urging a more formalist approach to the poetry. “Close reading” became the
mantra of this movement. At its most extreme, it urged the ignoring of
historical background in favour of an intense and personal engagement with
Shakespeare’s language: tone, speaker, image patterns, and verbal repetitions
and rhythms. Studies of imagery, rhetorical patterns, wordplay, and still more
gave support to the movement. At the commencement of the 21st century, close
reading remained an acceptable approach to the Shakespearean text.
New
interpretive approaches
Shakespeare
criticism of the 20th and 21st centuries has seen an extraordinary flourishing
of new schools of critical approach. Psychological and psychoanalytic critics
such as Ernest Jones have explored questions of character in terms of Oedipal
complexes, narcissism, and psychotic behaviour or, more simply, in terms of the
conflicting needs in any relationship for autonomy and dependence. Mythological
and archetypal criticism, especially in the influential work of Northrop Frye,
has examined myths of vegetation having to do with the death and rebirth of
nature as a basis for great cycles in the creative process. Christian
interpretation seeks to find in Shakespeare’s plays a series of deep analogies
to the Christian story of sacrifice and redemption.
Conversely,
some criticism has pursued a vigorously iconoclastic line of interpretation.
Jan Kott, writing in the disillusioning aftermath of World War II and from an
eastern European perspective, reshaped Shakespeare as a dramatist of the
absurd, skeptical, ridiculing, and antiauthoritarian. Kott’s deeply ironic view
of the political process impressed filmmakers and theatre directors such as
Peter Brook (King Lear, A Midsummer Night’s Dream). (For further discussion of
later interpretations of Shakespeare, see Sidebar: Viewing Shakespeare on Film;
Sidebar: Shakespeare and Opera.) He also caught the imagination of many
academic critics who were chafing at a modern political world increasingly
caught up in image making and the various other manipulations of the powerful
new media of television and electronic communication.
A
number of the so-called New Historicists (among them Stephen Greenblatt,
Stephen Orgel, and Richard Helgerson) read avidly in cultural anthropology,
learning from Clifford Geertz and others how to analyze literary production as
a part of a cultural exchange through which a society fashions itself by means
of its political ceremonials. Stephen Greenblatt’s Renaissance Self-Fashioning
(1980) provided an energizing model for the ways in which literary criticism
could analyze the process. Mikhail Bakhtin was another dominant influence. In
Britain the movement came to be known as Cultural Materialism; it was a first
cousin to American New Historicism, though often with a more class-conscious
and Marxist ideology. The chief proponents of this movement with regard to Shakespeare
criticism are Jonathan Dollimore, Alan Sinfield, John Drakakis, and Terry
Eagleton.
Feminist
criticism and gender studies
Feminist
and gender-study approaches to Shakespeare criticism made significant gains
after 1980. Feminists, like New Historicists, were interested in
contextualizing Shakespeare’s writings rather than subjecting them to
ahistorical formalist analysis. Turning to anthropologists such as Claude
Lévi-Strauss, feminist critics illuminated the extent to which Shakespeare
inhabited a patriarchal world dominated by men and fathers, in which women were
essentially the means of exchange in power relationships among those men.
Feminist criticism is deeply interested in marriage and courtship customs,
gender relations, and family structures. In The Tempest, for example, feminist
interest tends to centre on Prospero’s dominating role as father and on the way
in which Ferdinand and Miranda become engaged and, in effect, married when they
pledge their love to one another in the presence of a witness—Miranda’s father.
Plays and poems dealing with domestic strife (such as Shakespeare’s The Rape of
Lucrece) take on a new centrality in this criticism. Diaries,
marriage-counseling manuals, and other such documents become important to
feminist study. Revealing patterns emerge in Shakespeare’s plays as to male
insecurities about women, men’s need to dominate and possess women, their fears
of growing old, and the like. Much Ado About Nothing can be seen as about men’s
fears of being cuckolded; Othello treats the same male weakness with deeply
tragic consequences. The tragedy in Romeo and Juliet depends in part on Romeo’s
sensitivity to peer pressure that seemingly obliges him to kill Tybalt and thus
choose macho male loyalties over the more gentle and forgiving model of
behaviour he has learned from Juliet. These are only a few examples. Feminist
critics of the late 20th and early 21st centuries included, among many others,
Lynda Boose, Lisa Jardine, Gail Paster, Jean Howard, Karen Newman, Carol Neely,
Peter Erickson, and Madelon Sprengnether.
Gender
studies such as those of Bruce R. Smith and Valerie Traub also dealt
importantly with issues of gender as a social construction and with changing
social attitudes toward “deviant” sexual behaviour: cross-dressing, same-sex
relationships, and bisexuality.
Deconstruction
The
critical movement generally known as deconstruction centred on the instability
and protean ambiguity of language. It owed its origins in part to the
linguistic and other work of French philosophers and critics such as Ferdinand
de Saussure, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida. Some of the earliest
practitioners and devotees of the method in the United States were Geoffrey
Hartmann, J. Hillis Miller, and Paul de Man, all of Yale University.
Deconstruction stressed the extent to which “meaning” and “authorial intention”
are virtually impossible to fix precisely. Translation and paraphrase are
exercises in approximation at best.
The
implications of deconstruction for Shakespeare criticism have to do with
language and its protean flexibility of meanings. Patricia Parker’s Shakespeare
from the Margins: Language, Culture, Context (1996), for example, offers many
brilliant demonstrations of this, one of which is her study of the word preposterous,
a word she finds throughout the plays. It means literally behind for before,
back for front, second for first, end or sequel for beginning. It suggests the
cart before the horse, the last first, and “arsie versie,” with obscene
overtones. It is thus a term for disorder in discourse, in sexual
relationships, in rights of inheritance, and much more. Deconstruction as a
philosophical and critical movement aroused a good deal of animosity because it
questioned the fixity of meaning in language. At the same time, however,
deconstruction attuned readers to verbal niceties, to layers of meaning, to
nuance.
Late 20th-century and early 21st-century scholars were often revolutionary in their criticism of Shakespeare. To readers the result frequently appeared overly postmodern and trendy, presenting Shakespeare as a contemporary at the expense of more traditional values of tragic intensity, comic delight, and pure insight into the human condition. No doubt some of this criticism, as well as some older criticism, was too obscure and ideologically driven. Yet deconstructionists and feminists, for example, at their best portray a Shakespeare of enduring greatness. His durability is demonstrable in the very fact that so much modern criticism, despite its mistrust of canonical texts written by “dead white European males,” turns to Shakespeare again and again. He is dead, white, European, and male, and yet he appeals irresistibly to readers and theatre audiences all over the world. In the eyes of many feminist critics, he portrays women with the kind of fullness and depth found in authors such as Virginia Woolf and George Eliot.
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