30-Second Shakespeare: 50 key aspects of his work, life, and legacy, each explained in half a minute
By Ros Barber and Mark Rylance
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About this ebook
30-Second Shakespeare uses the unique approach of the bestselling 30-Second series to grapple with the work and influence of the world’s most famous playwright. This absorbing crash course takes the reader through what we know of his life, then turns to uncoding key concepts, themes and motifs in his plays and other works, and finishes with a succinct look at the Bard’s extraordinary literary and linguistic legacy.
Ros Barber
ROS BARBER was born in Washington, DC and raised in England. She is the author of three poetry collections and her poetry has appeared in Poetry Review, London Magazine, The Guardian among many other publications. Ros has a PhD in Marlowe studies and has taught writing at The University of Sussex for more than a decade. In 2011, she was awarded the prestigious Hoffman Prize for The Marlowe Papers. She lives in Brighton, England.
Read more from Ros Barber
The Marlowe Papers: A Novel Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Devotion Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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30-Second Shakespeare - Ros Barber
INTRODUCTION
Ros Barber
More books have been written about Shakespeare than about any other writer or creative person. So what particular use is this one? The wide-ranging nature of the subject, compressed into a condensed format, might make it very useful indeed. We may come across Shakespeare at school, we may even study or see a play or two, but most of us are unlikely to go much further. After 400 years, Elizabethan English is more or less a foreign language and one to which few of us can naturally relate. Yet we also become aware that Shakespeare is everywhere in our culture; he and his works are constantly name-checked, and if we don’t get the references, we are missing out. This book aims to make Shakespeare interesting and comprehensible by cutting out the waffle and boiling the subject down to its essence in order to explain what makes Shakespeare’s poems and plays so uniquely important, interesting and durable.
The man-shaped hole
Most general-purpose books about Shakespeare focus on the man; most academic books focus on the works. But the man – or rather the historical record connected to the man – is so unsatisfactory that some people question whether he wrote the works at all. Bill Bryson described Shakespeare as ‘the literary equivalent of an electron – forever there and not there’, and historian Michael Wood described Shakespeare’s biography as a ‘man-shaped hole’. Shakespeare biographies are obliged to recycle the same unsatisfactory material, padding it out with conjecture and assumption. This general-purpose book, written by scholars, does away with conjecture, focusing instead on the central body of work that made Shakespeare a household name.
The Globe
Originally built in 1599, many of Shakespeare’s plays were first performed at the Globe. The theatre was rebuilt in the 1990s, such is the Bard’s enduring appeal.
The humanity-shaped whole
For what matters about Shakespeare is not the man, but the humanity found in his works. The whispered intimacy of his sonnets. The psychological insights of his plays. Tragedies that grab you by the collar, pull you into the darkness and stab you in the belly. Comedies that undress you and stand you in front of a full-length mirror to laugh at yourself. Histories carved into the flesh of your past by men who Shakespeare shows us were fully human, whether they were a tavern-keeper or a king. Though now touted as a god, Shakespeare was fully human. He understood the human condition better than most and expressed it better than any, in compressed and poetic truths that we have quoted so often they’re now part of our language. What has made Shakespeare endure beyond any other writer is his gift for concisely revealing us to ourselves.
How this book works
The first chapter explores the context of the works – the society, influences and sources that shaped them – as well as the baseline of biography, exploring what we do and don’t know about the writer and his writing. If we might know him through his themes, the second chapter looks at seven subjects to which the author repeatedly returned. Chapter three addresses some perhaps surprising aspects of his knowledge and four examines the essential components of Shakespeare’s works. Chapter five looks at his heroes and villains and six unravels his interest in magic and monsters. Finally, we examine his legacy. Each entry is made up of the 30-second play that delves into the subject, further distilled into a 3-second prompt, with an additional 3-minute call raising a question or focusing the spotlight on an interesting detail to explore further. Feature spreads in every chapter focus on a single play as an example of Shakespeare’s genius.
The Weird Sisters
In Macbeth and many other plays, Shakespeare explored all aspects of humanity – light and dark, good and evil.
CONTEXT
CONTEXT
GLOSSARY
anti-Stratfordians People who doubt that William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon wrote the plays and poems attributed to him.
blank verse Verse that is written in a regular meter (a fixed rhythmical pattern) but doesn’t rhyme. Blank verse is usually written in lines of iambic pentameter, where the syllable pattern ‘weak-STRONG’ occurs five times per line. Blank verse is different from free verse, which has no rhyme or fixed rhythm.
Claudius The uncle of Hamlet who became king by pouring poison into his brother’s ear and marrying his brother’s wife (Hamlet’s mother, Queen Gertrude).
commedia dell’arte A form of theatre that began in Italy in the 16th century and is characterized by stock characters of fixed social types. Best translated as ‘comedy of craft’, it entailed improvised performances based around certain scenarios, often around sex, jealousy, love and old age.
dramaturgy The theory and practice of dramatic composition. Distinct from playwriting and directing (though one person might do all three), it involves putting a story into a form that can be acted, incorporating all the elements of drama, with an awareness of a play’s history and social context.
Elizabethan Pertaining to the reign of Elizabeth I of England (1558–1603). Those alive during her reign might be called Elizabethans and their practices, Elizabethan.
epigram A short, witty poem expressing a single thought or observation. Epigrams were particularly popular among the witty trainee lawyers of the Inns of Court in Elizabethan London.
epyllion A long narrative poem that has formal similarities (in theme, tone or style) with epic poetry, but is considerably shorter.
First Folio The First Folio is the term most often used to describe the first hardback edition of Shakespeare’s collected plays, which was published seven years after his death in 1623. The actual title of the First Folio was Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories & Tragedies.
Hamlet Perhaps Shakespeare’s most famous play, and the name of its leading character.
hanged, drawn and quartered A particularly gruesome Elizabethan punishment reserved for those found guilty of treason. Traitors were hanged by the neck until almost dead, disemboweled and emasculated while still alive, then beheaded and chopped into four quarters. These pieces were often put on public display.
Jacobean Pertaining to the reign of James I of England (1603–1625).
the King’s Men The name of Shakespeare’s theatre company after 1603, when King James VI of Scotland became King James I of England and subsequently their patron.
Nonconformism Not conforming to the practices and beliefs of the Church of England.
Ophelia Young, tragic heroine of Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
patronage The means whereby a wealthy member of the nobility gave money or other forms of support to a writer or artist. Writers would often dedicate works to a wealthy Lord or Lady, hoping for financial support in return.
play-broker Someone who acts as the chief play-buyer for their acting company, and who might also sell these plays to a publisher.
revenge tragedy A tragedy in which the primary driver of the plot is a need for revenge.
satire A type of comedy that uses exaggeration, irony, and ridicule to expose and criticize the behavior of individuals. Usually topical and often used as a means of undermining those in power.
sonnet A poem (usually about love) of 14 lines with a fixed rhyme scheme and regular meter (pattern of rhythm) and a ‘volta’ (turning point), allowing it to, for example, both ask a question and answer it.
tragicomedy A play that is both tragic and comic.
THE LIFE & LEGEND
the 30-second play
Tradition holds that William Shakespeare was born and died, with poetic appropriateness, on St George’s Day, 23 April. This is possible, but not provable: he was baptized on 26 April, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon and buried there on 25 April, 1616. The third of eight offspring (five surviving), he married at 18 and fathered three children; his only son died aged 11. By late 1594 he was a shareholder of the Lord Chamberlain’s Men (later the King’s Men) and five years later he was a shareholder in the Globe Theatre. But beyond the texts, Shakespeare left posterity little by which to know him: no letters, no manuscripts, and a will whose most interesting feature is the fact that he bequeathed his wife Anne ‘the second best bed’. Where history fails, myth fills the gap. Numerous stories abound of Shakespeare having to leave Stratford after poaching deer, or of holding horses outside a London theatre, or of being