Originally posted by jean
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Shakespeare: a variable writer?
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThis isn't my experience. When I was at school in the 50s we had to read it properly, and I loved it.
When I taught it in the 1980s, the students were always complaining and asking why they couldn't have a translation. That never occurred to us. But of course by that time the KJV, which helped familiarise us all with the language of the period, had virtually disappeared from public discourse.
But it was the 70s and 80 gave us the worst of garbled Shakespeare IMO. I really think the verse has been much better spoken in recent years.
It is a myth that Shakespeare's language is inpenetrable and difficult to understand. I had a bog standard comprehensive school education, yet I understood it. Since then, I've encountered many students with the same prejudice that I had - before reading it, they've already decided it's 'too hard' for them. Yet when I asked a reluctant student to tell me what he 'thought' a speech by Friar Lawrence in R&J meant, he got it absolutely right.
The idea that the text 'needs to be deciphered' seemed to strengthen in the 80s.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... recently I have been wondering whether inhabitants of another language have a benefit when it comes to Shakspere - they will tend to have a chance to read him in a language contemporary to their own. Only those of us in the English speaking world are restricted to read him in a 16th/17th century lingo.
Since the age of twenty, I have read the complete works (plays and poems) through in the first year of each decade - my fifth "go" is looming ever closer. Is he "variable"? Of course he is. But he's always excellent - as is perhaps suggested by the fact that I doubt that there will be anything of his that everybody on this Thread will agree is poor stuff. My problem is Titus Andronicus - the use of language is ham-fisted here, and the character perception risible: I've never believed it's authentic Shakespeare.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostAs "restrictions" go, that's a pretty good one. The opportunity to work and play with the language as it was four hundred years ago is something I find to rejoice about...
But to quote Hamlet - for the play, I remember, pleas'd not the million; 'twas caviary to the general....
How many will get it?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostAs "restrictions" go, that's a pretty good one. The opportunity to work and play with the language as it was four hundred years ago is something I find to rejoice about. (And, if one also loves Chaucer, and Gawain & the Green Knight, Beowulf ... well, Shakespeare is decidedly modern.
Since the age of twenty, I have read the complete works (plays and poems) through in the first year of each decade - my fifth "go" is looming ever closer. Is he "variable"? Of course he is. But he's always excellent - as is perhaps suggested by the fact that I doubt that there will be anything of his that everybody on this Thread will agree is poor stuff. My problem is Titus Andronicus - the use of language is ham-fisted here, and the character perception risible: I've never believed it's authentic Shakespeare.
This raises the thorny question of WHO actually wrote the plays....
I've always felt that if you were able to bring Shakespeare the Mayor of Stratford back to life, you'd find he was a terse Warwixkshire tradesman, whose only concernt was money (he made a lot of it and never went to prison - unusual among playwrights in those days).
I tend to think most of the plays were written by the Earl of Oxford, a man who had been close the seat of government (or 'in the kitchen' as Enoch Powell once memorably put it).
It would be hilarious (to me, at least) if one day it turned out they were, in fact, written by an Italian whose second language was English! :)
As to Titus....it's doggerel, but it can be effective in performance. The Merry Wives of Windsor is also a poor text, of no interest to scholars, but directors and actors can make something entertaining out of it.
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Originally posted by Conchis View Post
I tend to think most of the plays were written by the Earl of Oxford, a man who had been close the seat of government (or 'in the kitchen' as Enoch Powell once memorably put it).
"The convergence of documentary evidence of the type used by academics for authorial attribution – title pages, testimony by other contemporary poets and historians, and official records – sufficiently establishes Shakespeare's authorship for the overwhelming majority of Shakespeare scholars and literary historians, and no evidence links Oxford to Shakespeare's works. Oxfordians, however, reject the historical record and often propose the conspiracy theory that the record was falsified to protect the identity of the real author, invoking the dearth of evidence for any conspiracy as evidence of its success."
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... I like the phrasing in wiki -
"The convergence of documentary evidence of the type used by academics for authorial attribution – title pages, testimony by other contemporary poets and historians, and official records – sufficiently establishes Shakespeare's authorship for the overwhelming majority of Shakespeare scholars and literary historians, and no evidence links Oxford to Shakespeare's works. Oxfordians, however, reject the historical record and often propose the conspiracy theory that the record was falsified to protect the identity of the real author, invoking the dearth of evidence for any conspiracy as evidence of its success."
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What matters, rather than who wrote the text, is whether more than one person is responsible?
Anyway, regarding the plays, I certainly can’t agree with Conchy about TN and MAAN. Both works fully demonstrate the writer's genius. The last TN I saw was at Stratford about 6 years ago, which was both true to the text, and very funny.
My final year Shakespeare module focussed on 8 of the comedies, including Merchant of Venice. Fantastic learning experience.One of the texts we used as background was Merry Wives , about which, I have to admit,I remember very little indeed.
I’d like to see the BBC Shakespeare “ Comedy of Errors” with Roger Daltrey again. Only saw it once , while doing that module, and at the time I thought it and him excellent.Last edited by teamsaint; 20-02-18, 22:51.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostWhat matters, rather than who wrote the text, is whether more than one person is responsible?
Anyway, regarding the plays, I certainly can’t agree with Conchy about TN and MAAN. Both works fully demonstrate the writer's genius. The last TN I saw was at Stratford about 6 years ago, which was both true to the text, and very funny.
My final year Shakespeare module focussed on 8 of the comedies, including Merchant of Venice. Fantastic learning experience.One of the texts we used as background was Merry Wives , about which, I have to admit,I remember very little indeed.
I’d like to see the BBC Shakespeare “ Comedy of Errors” with Roger Daltrey again. Only saw it once , while doing that module, and at the time I thought it and him excellent.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWHO????
I don't know much about Willie the Shake, but I picked up a copy of Neil MacGregor's 'Shakespeare's Restless World' for a quid in a junk shop a couple of weeks back, and what a fine investment that was. Might even go and look out a couple of his plays on the back of it. MacGregor as fascinating as always.
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The biggest problem with Shakespeare is the same as the biggest problem with the Bible and other religious tomes. All are much too earthy. However, the former at least doesn't logically require any justification for its X rated certificate. Not essentially being a handbook for morality, it is entitled to wallow obsessively in fleshly pursuits and blood and gore. Of course, all these works are redeemed by the quality of the writing. Here the lyricism is more important than any need for comprehension. And names are important. Just as there is no point in becoming a politician unless one can be Churchill, so it is that any decent writer shouldn't even try for publication unless we can believe in their ability to be Shakespearian.
So the perfect entry to Shakespeare for twelve year olds is Macbeth, eh. We started with The Merchant of Venice where the pound of flesh demanded is literal. It was a reasonable enough introduction to the adult world. But, then, yes, it was a trip to Polanski and Tynan's depiction of treachery and murder following the murder of Polanski's wife and other members of the Manson family. The especially pessimistic angle in the film on all round moral decline was offset by us beating the censors because they were overruled by the school authorities and Francesca Annis delivering Lady Macbeth's sleepwalking soliloquy in the nude. I doubt that much of the writing itself was recalled nor that in Hamlet which probably followed it.
Twelfth Night was better for being easier and lighter. A comedy doesn't have to have a lot of laughs. Then in the mid teens it clicked, courtesy of the captivating all black Measure for Measure at the National, even if the great Norman Beaton was absent following his arrest. And The Tempest which is wonderful for being so other worldly. The actors' love for the Bard became entirely understandable. One empathises, for example, with Scales and West in their canal reminiscences. There is also a recognition that any questioning about a consistent voice misses the point. Sure, Carla Lane, the nearest that tv came to finding a Shakespeare, was mainly her own woman but, just like Winston, Will is above scrutiny or critique.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 21-02-18, 12:00.
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