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Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare

Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare
By Stephen Greenblatt

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A brilliant reading of Shakespeare's world yields a new understanding of the man and his genius.

A young man from the provinces—a man without wealth, connections, or university education—moves to London. In a remarkably short time he becomes the greatest playwright not just of his age but of all time. His works appeal to urban sophisticates and first-time theatergoers; he turns politics into poetry; he recklessly mingles vulgar clowning and philosophical subtlety. How is such an achievement to be explained?

Will in the World interweaves a searching account of Elizabethan England with a vivid narrative of the playwright's life. We see Shakespeare learning his craft, starting a family, and forging a career for himself in the wildly competitive London theater world, while at the same time grappling with dangerous religious and political forces that took less-agile figures to the scaffold. Above all, we never lose sight of the great works—A Midsummer Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth, and more—that continue after four hundred years to delight and haunt audiences everywhere. The basic biographical facts of Shakespeare's life have been known for over a century, but now Stephen Greenblatt shows how this particular life history gave rise to the world's greatest writer. 16 pages of color illustrations.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #41443 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-09-30
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 386 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
There's no shortage of good Shakespearean biographies. But Stephen Greenblatt, brilliant scholar and author of Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare, reminds us that the "surviving traces" are "abundant but thin" as to known facts. He acknowledges the paradox of the many biographies spun out of conjecture but then produces a book so persuasive and breathtakingly enjoyable that one wonders what he could have done if the usual stuff of biographical inquiry--memoirs, interviews, manuscripts, and drafts--had been at his disposal. Greenblatt uses the "verbal traces" in Shakespeare's work to take us "back into the life he lived and into the world to which he was so open." Whenever possible, he also ushers us from the extraordinary life into the luminous work. The result is a marvelous blend of scholarship, insight, observation, and, yes, conjecture--but conjecture always based on the most convincing and inspired reasoning and evidence. Particularly compelling are Greenblatt's discussions of the playwright's relationship with the university wit Robert Greene (discussed as a chief source for the character of Falstaff) and of Hamlet in relation to the death of Shakespeare's son Hamnet, his aging father, and the "world of damaged rituals" that England's Catholics were forced to endure.

Will in the World is not just the life story of the world's most revered writer. It is the story, too, of 16th- and 17th-century England writ large, the story of religious upheaval and political intrigue, of country festivals and brutal public executions, of the court and the theater, of Stratford and London, of martyrdom and recusancy, of witchcraft and magic, of love and death: in short, of the private but engaged William Shakespeare in his remarkable world. Throughout the book, Greenblatt's style is breezy and familiar. He often refers to the poet simply as Will. Yet for all his alacrity of style and the book's accessibility, Will in the World is profoundly erudite, an enormous contribution to the world of Shakespearean letters. --Silvana Tropea

Interview with Stephen Greenblatt
Stephen Greenblatt shares his thoughts about what make Shakespeare Shakespeare and why the Bard continues to fascinate us endlessly.

From Publishers Weekly
This much-awaited new biography of the elusive Bard is brilliant in conception, often superb in execution, but sometimes—perhaps inevitably—disappointing in its degree of speculativeness. Bardolators may take this last for granted, but curious lay readers seeking a fully cohesive and convincing life may at times feel the accumulation of "may haves," "might haves" and "could haves" make it difficult to suspend disbelief. Greenblatt's espousing, for instance, of the theory that Shakespeare's "lost" years before arriving in London were spent in Lancashire leads to suppositions that he might have met the Catholic subversive Edmund Campion, and how that might have affected him—and it all rests on one factoid: the bequeathing by a nobleman of some player's items to a William Shakeshafte, who may, plausibly, have been the young Shakespeare. Nevertheless, Norton Shakespeare general editor and New Historicist Greenblatt succeed impressively in locating the man in both his greatest works and the turbulent world in which he lived. With a blend of biography, literary interpretation and history, Greenblatt persuasively analyzes William's father's rise and fall as a public figure in Stratford, which pulled him in both Protestant and Catholic directions and made his eldest son "a master of double consciousness." In a virtuoso display of historical and literary criticism, Greenblatt contrasts Christopher Marlowe's Jew of Malta, Elizabeth's unfortunate Sephardic physician—who was executed for conspiracy—and Shakespeare's ambiguous villain Shylock. This wonderful study, built on a lifetime's scholarship and a profound ability to perceive the life within the texts, creates as vivid and full portrait of Shakespeare as we are likely ever to have. 16 pages color illus. not seen by PW.
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From Booklist
For all his generosity in enriching world literature with deathless characters--Romeo and Juliet, Falstaff and Bottom, Hamlet and Othello--Shakespeare kept his own personality remarkably hidden. A Harvard scholar here sheds penetrating light on this enigmatic genius, teasing out the mystery of artistic transformation by carefully connecting the Bard's brilliant verse to his times and circumstances. We see the importance of probable early encounters with Marlowe, Watson, Nashe, and other prominent dramatists, and at the other end of Shakespeare's meteoric career, Greenblatt discerns the alchemy that converted fears of old age into the fury of King Lear and transformed mingled pride and misgivings over a lifetime's work into the autumnal poise of The Tempest. As the same spirit of sympathetic inquiry--by turns subtly speculative and candidly skeptical--plays over other key episodes in Shakespeare's life, readers finally glimpse the exceptional man who turned poetry into a panoramic mirror for all of humanity. A valuable resource for both professional and casual Shakespeareans. Bryce Christensen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Customer Reviews

The mysterious bard5
I guess I'm supposed to follow the chain of "if this, then that" suppositions, and gain some idea of who was Shakespeare. Not having read much about Shakespeare's life before, at least I now understand why so much controversy exists about the authorship of his plays. With so little paper trail to go on, this biography rests on much supposition and interpretation of the plays. I see Shakespeare here as the journalist "Adam Smith" once saw the popular but elusive Carlos Castaneda, in the 1970's, as a swoosh of color running down the emergency back stairs of a large New York publisher's office.

Greenblatt succeeds in his rich portrait of Elizabethan England. The state of war between Elizabeth and the Pope, with the threat of invasion from Catholic Europe and subversion from within plays out with English Catholics at the center of suspicion. The circumspect Shakespeare observes the trials and beheadings, keeping his own counsel, and using what he sees and hears in such plays as The Merchant of Venice and Macbeth. The value of this work is in the history of the period.

Lengthy, but informative.4
I had a somewhat difficult time getting involved in the book in the beginning. However, my love of W. Shakespeare kept me going with many rewards. There is so much more to his life and the influences to his success, than one has ever heard until now. The way that his characters developed mainly from his experiences and the people that he knew was very revealing. I loved how his characters names indicated who they were in most instances and told much more about them. I did enjoy the book, very much.
Joyce A.

The more the merrier?2
I think a lot of Shakespeare fans are grateful when a new bio comes out. It seems to revive the strength of the usual authorship assumption. The book gives evidence that the Shakespeares might have been covertly Catholic and on that basis mainly to suggest that William may have got his deep and spectacularly undocumented formal education in Greek, the classics, and other subjects in a clandestine Catholic stronghold where drama was performed. It sounds exciting to suggest that there was something special and secretive going on along these lines in Shakespeare's parental home family; but a lot of English still leaned Catholic back then, naturally enough, since even the previous queen, Elizabeth's sister, was "bloodily" Catholic Mary. I was given Greenblatt's book as a birthday present and did read it carefully, but didn't feel further enlightened by it or even convinced it contained any additional information about his life that bore very certainly or tellingly on Shakespeare as author. The best Shakespeare biographies are the short ones, I think. Three or four pages. Of course, beyond that there's lots to read interestedly about the times and Elizabethan/Jacobean theater. Like other Shakespeare book-length bios, this one isn't likely to much increase your understanding of or appreciation for the brilliant Shakespeare plays.