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Summary Shakespeare (Frank Albers) 2023

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A very complete summary of Shakespeare's course, taught by Frank Albers. The summary contains all lecture notes as well as the information in the book. The summary was made in the year 2023.

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  • De toneelstukken en gedichten die we in 2023 moesten lezen
  • August 6, 2023
  • 115
  • 2022/2023
  • Summary
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Shakespeare 2023
Frank Albers
William Shakespeare 2023

Inhoud
1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................................... 6

1.1. Stephen Greenblatt – General Introduction ........................................................................... 6

1.1.1. “He was not of an age, but for all time” .......................................................................... 6

1.1.2. Shakespeare’s World .......................................................................................................... 6

1.2. Introduction class ..................................................................................................................... 15

1.2.1. The Many Lives of William Shakespeare ......................................................................... 16

1.2.2. Biographical ....................................................................................................................... 16

1.2.3. The status of the Shakespeare Text ................................................................................. 20

2. Part one: Money: “Commodification: the Essence of our Time” – Colin Leys ......................... 23

2.1. Commodities and commodification ..................................................................................... 23

2.2. Causes and consequences of commodification ................................................................ 23

2.3. The Public Sphere ..................................................................................................................... 23

2.4. The State .................................................................................................................................... 23

2.5. Total Capitalism: capital shoots itself in the foot .................................................................. 23

3. The Taming of the Shrew (1592/1623) page 343 TNS 3rd ed. ...................................................... 24

3.1. Introduction (TNS 3E pp 343-354) ............................................................................................ 24

3.2. Inductions and Act one ........................................................................................................... 25

3.2.1 Persons of the play ................................................................................................................. 25

3.3. Class discussion ......................................................................................................................... 27

3.3.1. Title: What’s a shrew .......................................................................................................... 28

3.3.2. Structure: “two interwoven plots and a frame tale” ..................................................... 28

3.3.3. Disguises, transformations … ............................................................................................ 29

3.3.4. The actual taming of the shrew....................................................................................... 30

3.3.5. Language: “a vehicle for domination” .......................................................................... 30

3.3.6. “Thou know’st not gold’s effect”: Money, property, love, commodification ............ 32

4. The Comedy of Errors p. 745 TNS 3rd. ed. ...................................................................................... 33

4.1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 33

4.2. Introduction class discussion ................................................................................................... 33

4.3. Story............................................................................................................................................ 33

4.3.1 Persons of the play ................................................................................................................. 33



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Frank Albers
4.4. Sources ...................................................................................................................................... 35

4.5. Themes ....................................................................................................................................... 35

4.5.1. The language of commerce ........................................................................................... 35

4.5.2. Gender roles (and pragmatic versus romantic views of marriage) ............................ 35

4.5.3. The unreality of Ephesus ................................................................................................... 36

4.5.4. (Loss of) Selfhood Experience .......................................................................................... 36

4.5.5. The law & the fear of public disorder.............................................................................. 37

4.6. “She is spherical, like a globe…” - Puns ................................................................................ 37

5. Romeo and Juliet p. 957 TNS 3rd Ed. .............................................................................................. 38

5.1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 38

5.2. Class on Romeo and Juliet ...................................................................................................... 38

5.2.1 Date ......................................................................................................................................... 38

5.2.2 Sources .................................................................................................................................... 39

5.2.3 Story ......................................................................................................................................... 39

5.2.3.1 Persons of the play .............................................................................................................. 39

5.2.4 Themes .................................................................................................................................... 41

5.2.5. The problem of longin for social/cultural/political reconciliation ................................... 42

6. The Merchant of Venice (1598) p1327 TNS 3rd Ed. ...................................................................... 42

6.1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 42

6.2. Class discussion ......................................................................................................................... 42

6.2.1. Date .................................................................................................................................... 42

6.2.2. Story .................................................................................................................................... 43

6.2.2.1 Persons of the play .............................................................................................................. 43

6.2.3. Influences/sources ............................................................................................................ 46

6.2.4. Themes................................................................................................................................ 46

6.2.5. Puns/instability of language and meaning .................................................................... 47

6.2.6. Questions? Reflections ...................................................................................................... 47

7. Part Two: Power: “Shakespeare and the Ethics of Authority” – Stephen Greenblatt ............. 48

8. Power: Richard the Second p. 885 TNS 3rd Ed. ............................................................................. 48

8.1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 48

8.2. Factual details of the play ....................................................................................................... 49

8.2.1. Historical background ...................................................................................................... 49



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Frank Albers
8.2.2. Shakespeare’s two tetralogies ........................................................................................ 50

8.2.3. Richard II – The Peasants’ Revolt ..................................................................................... 51

8.3. The play ..................................................................................................................................... 51

8.3.1 Persons of the play ................................................................................................................. 51

8.4. Themes ....................................................................................................................................... 55

8.4.1. Fear of disorder & the significance of law ..................................................................... 55

8.4.2. Royal power: medieval (birth right) versus modern (popularity) ................................. 55

8.4.3. The King’s Two Bodies (E. Kantorowicz, 1957) ................................................................ 56

8.4.4. Fear of usurpation and the subversive quality of the play ........................................... 56

8.5. (Highly) significant passages ................................................................................................... 56

9. Power: Coriolanus p2933 TNS 3rd Ed. ............................................................................................. 56

9.1. Sources ...................................................................................................................................... 56

9.2. Historical context ...................................................................................................................... 56

9.3. The play ..................................................................................................................................... 57

9.3.1 Persons of the play ................................................................................................................. 57

9.4. Themes ....................................................................................................................................... 60

9.4.1. Pride .................................................................................................................................... 60

9.4.2. Mistrust of language (of flattery) (>< deeds) ................................................................. 60

9.4.3. Distrust of people (fickleness…) >< populism! ................................................................ 60

9.4.4. Power and the fable of the belly .................................................................................... 61

10. Henry V p1533 TNS 3rd Ed. ............................................................................................................ 61

10.1. Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 61

10.2. Tetralogies repeated ............................................................................................................ 61

10.3. Date and sources ................................................................................................................. 61

10.4. Historical context .................................................................................................................. 62

10.4.1. Shakespeare’s time ....................................................................................................... 62

10.4.2. Henry’s time .................................................................................................................... 62

10.5. The story ................................................................................................................................. 63

10.5.1 Persons of the play ............................................................................................................... 63

10.5.1. Act 1 ................................................................................................................................ 65

10.5.2. Act 2 ................................................................................................................................ 66

10.5.3. Act 3 ................................................................................................................................ 67



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10.5.4. Act 4 ................................................................................................................................ 67

10.5.5. Act 5 ................................................................................................................................ 68

10.5.6. Epilogue .......................................................................................................................... 68

10.6. Themes ................................................................................................................................... 68

10.6.1. Glorifying war ................................................................................................................. 68

10.6.2. Criticizing war ................................................................................................................. 68

10.7. Shakespeare and War ......................................................................................................... 68

11. Macbeth (the tragedy of Macbeth) p2709 TNS 3rd Ed. ........................................................... 69

11.1. The story ................................................................................................................................. 69

11.2. Historical background and sources .................................................................................... 72

11.3. Themes and passages .......................................................................................................... 73

11.4. Life, Melancholy and the stage .......................................................................................... 73

12. Hamlet (The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark) p1751 TNS 3rd Ed. ............................... 74

12.1. Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 74

12.2. Brief plot summary ................................................................................................................ 76

12.3. Date/versions......................................................................................................................... 76

12.3.1. Example of memorial reconstruction .......................................................................... 77

12.4. Sources ................................................................................................................................... 77

12.5. Revenge play ........................................................................................................................ 77

12.5.1. Spirals of revenge in Hamlet .............................................................................................. 78

12.6. Close reading - Set piece .................................................................................................... 79

12.6.1 Persons of the play ............................................................................................................... 79

12.6.1. Why does Hamlet dither? ............................................................................................. 81

12.6.2. Hamlet’s self-reproaching ............................................................................................ 82

12.6.3. T.S. Eliot: “Hamlet and His Problems” (1919) ............................................................... 82

12.7. Political background ............................................................................................................ 83

12.8. What is the question, Really… ? .......................................................................................... 83

13. Othello p2073 TNS 3rd Ed. ........................................................................................................... 83

13.1. Date ........................................................................................................................................ 83

13.2. Sources ................................................................................................................................... 83

13.3. Story ........................................................................................................................................ 84

13.3.1 Persons of the play ............................................................................................................... 84



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13.4. Themes ................................................................................................................................... 85

13.4.1. The ‘Moor’ ...................................................................................................................... 85

13.4.2. Venice versus Cyprus .................................................................................................... 85

13.4.3. Iago’s tricks ..................................................................................................................... 85

13.4.4. Jealousy .......................................................................................................................... 87

13.4.5. Cuckoldry: fear and fantasy ........................................................................................ 87

13.5. Background: the Muslim in/and Elizabethan England ..................................................... 88

13.6. Interpretations ....................................................................................................................... 88

13.6.1. The “double time scheme” .......................................................................................... 88

13.6.2. Othello and the problem of ‘race’ ............................................................................. 88

13.7. Orientalism in Othello ........................................................................................................... 89

13.7.1. Link between ‘jealousy’ and ‘orientalism’ .................................................................. 89

13.8. Othello’s final speech ........................................................................................................... 90

13.9. Othello and the nature of ‘loyalty’ ..................................................................................... 90

13.9.1. Loyalty: feeling or conduct? ........................................................................................ 90

13.9.2. Loyalty: value and object............................................................................................. 90

14. King Lear p2317 TNS 3rd Ed. ........................................................................................................ 90

14.1. Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 90

14.2. Date/ Versions ....................................................................................................................... 91

14.3. Sources ................................................................................................................................... 91

14.4. Historical Context / background ........................................................................................ 91

14.5. The story ................................................................................................................................. 92

14.5.1 Persons of the play (folio edition) ....................................................................................... 92

14.5.1. A parallel plot: Gloucester and his sons Edmond and Edgar .................................. 95

14.6. Themes ................................................................................................................................... 96

14.6.1. The Meaning of Nature ................................................................................................. 96

14.6.2. The nature of loyalty ...................................................................................................... 96

14.6.3. (Motif) the eye (seeing) ................................................................................................ 96

14.6.4. The (ab)use of Disguise ................................................................................................. 96

14.6.5. From king (authority) to Man (vulnerability, mortality) .............................................. 96

14.6.6. (Fear of) madness .......................................................................................................... 97

14.7. Passages ................................................................................................................................ 97



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14.8. Reception .............................................................................................................................. 97

15. Sonnets p2241 TNS 3rd Ed. ............................................................................................................ 98

15.1. Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 98

15.2. Class discussion ................................................................................................................... 100

15.2.1. Dates ............................................................................................................................. 100

15.2.2. Background .................................................................................................................. 101

15.2.3. What is a sonnet? ........................................................................................................ 102

15.2.4. Structure of Shakespeare’s sequence of sonnets ................................................... 102

15.2.5. Numerological symbolism in the sonnets .................................................................. 103

15.3. Close reading of some sonnets ......................................................................................... 104

15.4. Critical reception of the sonnets ....................................................................................... 115

16. Exam ............................................................................................................................................ 115



1. Introduction
1.1. Stephen Greenblatt – General Introduction
1.1.1. “He was not of an age, but for all time”
- Shakespeare’s genius was recognized almost immediately (not years after his death, or
only by natives etc)
- “He was not of an age, but for all time” – Ben Jonson
o Shakespeare belongs to world culture
o Great creating creature
- Shakespeare = artist to fully express the human condition – turn to his work for questions
about live.
- Peculiar historical circumstances and specific conventions.
- Make him more likable (or his works at least)
o Texts with glosses and notes
o Explanatory introductions (historical events)
o Hollywood and sound staged of the BBC

1.1.2. Shakespeare’s World
1.1.2.1. Life and Death
- Life expectancy under thirty years in early modern England (seventy today)
- Infant mortality rates were extraordinarily high
o In the poorer parts of London, only about half of the children survived until the age
of 15. Children of aristocrats fared only a little better
o Frequency of death hardened people to loss or made it routine, people got used
to it (we cannot assume this!)
- Healthcare as we know today was non-existent
- Bubonic plague was the worst shock early modern England knew
o Repeatedly ravaged England, until the third quarter of the seventeenth century


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,Shakespeare 2023
Frank Albers
o Physicians prescribed amulets, preservatives, and sweet-smelling substances (on
the theory that the plague was carried by noxious vapors)
o In the plague-ridden year of 1564, the year of Shakespeare’s birth, some 254 people
died in his native Stratford-upon-Avon, out of a total population of 800. The year
before, some 20,000 Londoners are thought to have died; in 1593, almost 15,000; in
1603, 36,000, or over a sixth of the city’s inhabitants
o Severe social effects: looting, violence, despair, poverty, unemployment, food
shortages
o London plague regulations of 1583
§ infected and their households should be locked in their homes for a month
§ streets should be kept clean
§ vagrants expelled
§ funerals and plays restricted and banned
§ religion was still allowed à God would help them?
o Effect on Shakespeare’s profession
§ Cities kept records of the weekly number of plague deaths
§ Theatres temporarily closed
§ to prevent contagion but also to avoid making an angry God still angrier
with the spectacle of idleness
o while restricting public assemblies may in fact have slowed the epidemic, other
policies, such as killing the cats and dogs may have made things worse, since the
disease was spread not by these animals but by the fleas that bred on the black
rats that infested the poorer neighbourhoods. Also the playing theatre companies
driven out of London by the closing of the theatres m ay have carried
plague to the provincial towns.
- Food shortage
o A few successive bad harvests in the mid-1590s
o Starvation
o Inflation, low wages, rent increases
§ Many people very little cushion against disaster

1.1.2.2. Wealth
- Despite rampant disease, the population of England in Shakespeare’s lifetime grew
steadily, from approximately 3,060,000 in 1564 to 4,060,000 in 1600 and 4,510,000 in 1616
- Deathrate twice what it is today, birthrate thrice the current figure
- London: largest and fastest-growing in all of Europe
- Wages in London tended to be around 50% higher than in the rest of the country
- 1/8 of English people lived in London at some point in their lives
- The economic viability of Shakespeare’s profession was closely linked to this extraordinary
demographic boom: between 1567 and 1642, theater historians have estimated, the
London playhouses were paid anywhere between 50 and 75 million visits
o There was money to spend
- Peace and prosperity after dynastic wars of the fifteenth century
o Textile industry – woolen cloth more than ¾ of England’s export
o In the latter half of the century, London, which handled more than 85 percent of all
exports, regularly shipped abroad more than 100,000 woolen cloths a year, at a
value of at least £750,000. This figure does not include the increasingly important


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, Shakespeare 2023
Frank Albers
and profitable trade in so-called New Draperies, including textiles that went by such
exotic names as bombazines, callamancoes, damazellas, damizes, mockadoes,
and virgenatoes.

1.1.2.3. Imports, Patents, and Monopolies
- Late 16th century: importing substantial quantities of silks, satins, velvets, embroidery, gold
and silver lace
o Satisfy the elite and those who aspired to dress like the elite
- Sumptuary laws: conservative attempt to protect the existing social order from upstarts
- One of the principal English imports was wine
- Also: canvas, linen, fish, olive oil, sugar, molasses, dates, oranges and lemons, figs, raisins,
almonds, capers, indigo, ostrich feathers, and that increasingly popular drug tobacco.
- Joint stock companies to import goods for the burgeoning English market
- English privateers “imported” American products
o 1592 Sir Walter Ralegh: captured a huge Portuguese carrack Madre de Dios à
Dartmouth
o Queen privately invested 1,800 pounds and received about 80,000 pounds
- War with Spain 1586-1604: privateers annually amounted to 10-15 % of the total value of
English imports
o ! BUT ! not enough, worry for the nation’s natural wealth
o Discourse of the Commonweal (1549) – Sir Thomas Smith
§ Against import of mirrors, paper, laces, gloves etc.
o An Essay on the State of England in Relation to Its Trade (1695) – John Cary
§ More than a century later, same concern
§ Expand productive domestic product
§ Actors were not regarded as productive contribution to the national wealth
- The government attempted to stem the flow of gold overseas by establishing a patent
system initially designed to encourage skilled foreigners to settle in England by granting
them exclusive rights to produce particular wares by a patented method
o 17th century: men and women in variety of new industries
o ! BUT ! enrichment of the few
o issue of monopolies provoked bitter criticism and parliamentary debate for
decades
§ 1601: Elizabeth had to revoke some of the most hated monopolies
§ James 1: whole system revoked

1.1.2.4. Haves and Have-Nots
- Sir Thomas Smith wrote a description of England and saw the commonwealth as divided
into four sorts of people
o Gentlemen
§ Monarch – nobles – knights – simple gentlemen
§ Simple gentlemen: those who studieth, could live idly and without manual
labour
o Citizens
§ positions of importance and responsibility in their cities
o Yeomen artificers
§ farmers with land and a measure of economic independence
o laborers


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