I am in no position to make any statements about Shakespeare. As someone who is vastly under-read on the matter and has only studied the comedies (I dropped out of school before we got to the romances, much less the histories, tragedies or any of the poetry) I really am the last one to make any lasting statements about the bard, but Stephen Greenblatt is. He is the author of Will in the World. The man is also a professor at Harvard as well as the editor of The Norton Shakespeare, the definitive Shakespeare collection.
Greenblatt is a pretty good writer himself and his sheer enthusiasm for the text really makes the book fun to read. The notes on Shakespeare’s life are informative, but not really interesting or even new, as almost all that information has been said before (the notable exception, for me, was the concept that Hamlet was written for Shakespeare’s dead son, Hamnet). The real joy of the book comes the anecdotes about Elizabethan and Jacobean England and their interplay with Shakespeare’s plays. The chapters of note are the two on The Merchant of Venice and Macbeth. They serve to highlight the era in which those masterpieces were written while drawing attention to the reasons why (aside from the prose) they are so important.
In the end Greenblatt concludes that what really makes Shakespeare so special is his opacity and his love of the mundane. To me that is the definition of high art. One must fill the work with vagaries, giving the audience something to question, to seek. There has to be some sort of knot at the heart of the work that can never be untied, but is impossible to stop playing with. Then for art to be truly high it must be universal and what is more universal than the mundane.
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2 comments:
High Art Calvin And Hobbes
High art as defined by calvin and hobbes. I do very much agree that the mundane can make the most incredible art. There is a set of paintings by Monet where he painted the same haystack at different times of the year. What is more mundane and uninteresting than haystacks, but the paintings are some of the most interesting paintings I have seen.
Shakespeare was definitely into writing about the mundane, but also he reveled in the absurd. This fact is shown by his comedies such as the A Mid Summer Night's Dream. The relationships in that play are completely absurd and interesting to see played out. I know this because I acted in that particular play. Another thin that makes his writings high art is that they are laced with innuendos and references. This makes it completely new every time you read it. I hope that the rest of sublteties don't get lost with time and change in culture as I am sure some have.
Great Essay.
Mitch
i may be a little inebriated atm, but i say i need some more writing from bill.
word
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