And let us, ciphers to this great accompt,
On your imaginary forces work.
(Henry V. Prologue, 17-18)
Stephen Greenblatt, a distinguished scholar of Shakespearean studies, tries to answer one great question that has puzzled scholars for centuries--“How did Shakespeare become Shakespeare?” (11) --in his semi-biographical fiction: Will in the World.
As an eminent practitioner of new historicism, Greenblatt subtly employs the critical method throughout this book. New historicism is known for the challenge of authenticity in historical writings. Only this time, Shakespeare's life is treated as a text waiting to be decoded. At the beginning, Greenblatt presents “A Note to the Reader,” in which he frankly admits “there are huge gaps in knowledge that make any biographical studies of Shakespeare an exercise in speculation” (18). Whether an excuse or a disclaimer, it seems to give Greenblatt the privilege to lead us into the world of Shakespeare that he reconstructed: “Let us imagine that Shakespeare” (23, my emphasis). This approach implies a self-awareness in the fictiveness of biographical writing, and serves as a blatant manifesto to ask readers' permission to forgive any possible audacious linkage he is to make between Shakespeare's personal life and his work. Greenblatt, then, invites readers to this intellectual playground of imagination. Hence, it would be pointless to investigate how irresponsible Greenblatt is according to the common criteria that we would expect from a biographical author.
Moreover, Greenblatt's new historical approach is manifested in the insertion of historical documents, anecdotes, biographies, and Shakespeare's works in his narration. In so doing, all the conjectural statements he makes gain plausibility. New historicists consider literary texts as a production of particular socio-political circumstances, stressing the symbioses between historical documents and literary works. Greenblatt engagingly interweaves historical documents with fictional elements and analogizes how the Bard became the Bard.
The subject of Chapter 2, entitled “The Dream of Restoration,” is the re-creation of Shakespearean “Lost Years.” Truth first. Concerning the years between the registration of Will's twins and Robert Greene's notorious attack in Groats-Worth of Wit, Shakespearean scholars seem to have a consensus that there is a shortage of evidence for events taking place after Shakespeare left his hometown (McDonald 11-15). However, as the title of this chapter suggests, Greenblatt, based on the family's coat of arms reapplication, deduces that the financial deterioration of his father must have affected Shakespeare so much that, later in life, he aspired to restore and establish his family's honor in the intensely hierarchical society.
Works Cited
Ellis, David. “Biography and Shakespeare: An Outsider's View.” Cambridge Quarterly 29.4 (2000): 296-313. Print.
Greenblatt, Stephen. Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare. New York: Norton, 2004. Print.
McDonald, Russ. “Shakespeare, ‘Shakespeare,' and the Problem of Authorship.” The Bedford Companion to Shakespeare. 2ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2001. 1 2-35. Print.
Shakespeare, William. “Henry V.” The Norton Shakespeare. Ed Stephen Greenblatt, Walter Cohen, Jean E. Howard, and Katharine Eisaman Maus. New York: Norton, 1997. 1454-1523. Print.
References
Brannigan, John. Introducing Literary Theories: A Guide and Glossary. Ed. Julian Wolfreys. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 2001. Print.
Raman Selden, Peter Widdowson, and Peter Brooker. A Reader's Guide to Contemporary Literary Theory. 5th ed. Harlow: Pearson Longman, 2005. Print.
|