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9780375421907

Shakespeare After All

Shakespeare After All
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  • ISBN-13: 9780375421907
  • ISBN: 0375421904
  • Publication Date: 2004
  • Publisher: Random House Inc

AUTHOR

Garber, Marjorie

SUMMARY

Every age creates its own Shakespeare. What is often described as the timelessness of Shakespeare, the transcendent qualities for which his plays have been praised around the world and across the centuries, is perhaps better understood as an uncanny timeliness, a capacity to speak directly to circumstances the playwright could not have anticipated or foreseen. Like a portrait whose eyes seem to follow you around the room, engaging your glance from every angle, the plays and their characters seem always to be "modern," always to be "us." "He was not of an age, but for all time." This was the verdict of Shakespeare's great rival and admirer, the poet and playwright Ben Jonson, in a memorial poem affixed to the First Folio of Shakespeare's plays. "Thou art a monument without a tomb," wrote Jonson, And art alive still, while thy book doth live, And we have wits to read, and praise to give. We might compare this passage to Shakespeare's own famous lines in Sonnet 18, the sonnet that begins "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" and ends: So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this gives life to thee. The sonnets have indeed endured, and given life to the beloved addressee, but it is the sonnet that praises him, not the unnamed "fair youth" to whom the sonnet is written, that lives on in our eyes, ears, and memory. Both "of an age" and "for all time," Shakespeare is the defining figure of the English Renaissance, and the most cited and quoted author of every era since. But if we create our own Shakespeare, it is at least as true that the Shakespeare we create is a Shakespeare that has, to a certain extent, created us. The world in which we live and think and philosophize is, to use Ralph Waldo Emerson's word, "Shakspearized." "I have a smack of Hamlet myself, if I do say so," wrote Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Goethe thought so, too, and so did Sigmund Freud. So, indeed, did the actress Sarah Bernhardt, who, having played the role in a celebrated production in France in 1899, and again in London in 1901, declared that she could not imagine Hamlet as a man. But perhaps Hamlet, a play that from the Romantic era on has been established as the premier Western performance of consciousness, is too obvious a case to make the point. Around the world and across the years, Macbeth has become a figure for ambition, Othello for jealous love, Lear a paradigm of neglected old age and its unexpected nobilities, Cleopatra a pattern of erotic and powerful womanhood, Prospero in The Tempest a model of the artist as philosopher and ruler. Romeo and Juliet are ubiquitous examples of young love, its idealism and excess. But if Shakespeare seems to us in a surprising way so "modern," it's because in a sense his language and his characters have created a lexicon of modernity. This is a book devoted in part to exploring the remarkable omnipresence of Shakespeare in our lives. King Lear as written and performed in its original historical context was "about" pressing questions for the seventeenth century, like absolute monarchy, and royal succession and the obligations of vassals. For most citizens of the twenty-first century, "king" is an archaic title, as it emphatically was not for the subjects of James I, under whose patronage Shakespeare's company, the King's Men, performed and prospered. Mid-twentieth-century readers often translated "king" into "father," seeing the drama as one centered on the family rather than the realm. Lear's railing against the heavens hGarber, Marjorie is the author of 'Shakespeare After All', published 2004 under ISBN 9780375421907 and ISBN 0375421904.

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