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Showing Original Post only (View all)Was Shakespeare a Woman? [View all]
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/06/who-is-shakespeare-emilia-bassano/588076/?utm_source=pocket-newtabUpdated at 6:33 p.m. ET on June 7, 2019.
Was Shakespeare a Woman?
The authorship controversy has yet to surface a compelling alternative to the man buried in Stratford. Perhaps thats because, until recently, no one was looking in the right place. The case for Emilia Bassano.
On a spring night in 2018, I stood on a Manhattan sidewalk with friends, reading Shakespeare aloud. We were in line to see an adaptation of Macbeth and had decided to pass the time refreshing our memories of the plays best lines. I pulled up Lady Macbeths soliloquy on my iPhone. Come, you spirits / That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here, I read, thrilled once again by the incantatory power of the verse. I remembered where I was when I first heard those lines: in my 10th-grade English class, startled out of my adolescent stupor by this woman rebelling magnificently and malevolently against her submissive status. Make thick my blood, / Stop up th access and passage to remorse. Six months into the #MeToo movement, her fury and frustration felt newly resonant.
Pulled back into plays Id studied in college and graduate school, I found myself mesmerized by Lady Macbeth and her sisters in the Shakespeare canon. Beatrice, in Much Ado About Nothing, raging at the limitations of her sex (O God, that I were a man! I would eat his heart in the marketplace). Rosalind, in As You Like It, affecting the swagger of masculine confidence to escape those limitations (Well have a swashing and a martial outside, / As many other mannish cowards have / That do outface it with their semblances). Isabella, in Measure for Measure, fearing no one will believe her word against Angelos, rapist though he is (To whom should I complain? Did I tell this, / Who would believe me?). Kate, in The Taming of the Shrew, refusing to be silenced by her husband (My tongue will tell the anger of my heart, / Or else my heart concealing it will break). Emilia, in one of her last speeches in Othello before Iago kills her, arguing for womens equality (Let husbands know / Their wives have sense like them).
I was reminded of all the remarkable female friendships, too: Beatrice and Heros allegiance; Emilias devotion to her mistress, Desdemona; Paulinas brave loyalty to Hermione in The Winters Tale; and plenty more. (Lets consult together against this greasy knight, resolve the merry wives of Windsor, revenging themselves on Falstaff.) These intimate female alliances are fresh inventionsthey dont exist in the literary sources from which many of the plays are drawn. And when the plays lean on historical sources (Plutarch, for instance), they feminize them, portraying legendary male figures through the eyes of mothers, wives, and lovers. Why was Shakespeare able to see the womans position, write entirely as if he were a woman, in a way that none of the other playwrights of the age were able to? In her book about the plays female characters, Tina Packer, the founding artistic director of Shakespeare & Company, asked the question very much on my mind.
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Simple. William Shakespeare was an actor/shareholder of the Lord Chamberlain's Men, later
Aristus
Jul 2019
#9
Actually, Christopher Marlowe's writing style was notably different from that of Shakespeare.
Aristus
Jul 2019
#3
This is fascinating! A very convincing argument - I'll have to read some more
The Velveteen Ocelot
Jul 2019
#8