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Shylock Is Shakespeare

Shylock Is Shakespeare
By Kenneth Gross

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Kenneth's Gross' new book on Shakespeare is lively, personal, and profound.

Product Description

Shylock, the Jewish moneylender in The Merchant of Venice who famously demands a pound of flesh as security for a loan to his antisemitic tormentors, is one of Shakespeare’s most complex and idiosyncratic characters. With his unsettling eloquence and his varying voices of protest, play, rage, and refusal, Shylock remains a source of perennial fascination. What explains the strange and enduring force of this character, so unlike that of any other in Shakespeare’s plays? Kenneth Gross posits that the figure of Shylock is so powerful because he is the voice of Shakespeare himself.

Marvelously speculative and articulate, Gross’s book argues that Shylock is a breakthrough for Shakespeare the playwright, an early realization of the Bard’s power to create dramatic voices that speak for hidden, unconscious, even inhuman impulses—characters larger than the plays that contain them and ready to escape the author’s control. Shylock is also a mask for Shakespeare’s own need, rage, vulnerability, and generosity, giving form to Shakespeare’s ambition as an author and his uncertain bond with the audience. Gross’s vision of Shylock as Shakespeare’s covert double leads to a probing analysis of the character’s peculiar isolation, ambivalence, opacity, and dark humor. Addressing the broader resonance of Shylock, both historical and artistic, Gross examines the character’s hold on later readers and writers, including Heinrich Heine and Philip Roth, suggesting that Shylock mirrors the ambiguous states of Jewishness in modernity. 

A bravura critical performance, Shylock Is Shakespeare will fascinate readers with its range of reference, its union of rigor and play, and  its conjectural—even fictive—means of coming to terms with the question of Shylock, ultimately taking readers to the very heart of Shakespeare’s humanizing genius.

(20070921)


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1156807 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-12-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 216 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"[A] whimsical, provocative book, which is, above all, committed to the idea that the moral and ethical questions Shakespeare raised were not of an age, but for all time. Kenneth Gross captures what he calls the sly shock of the play: Shakespeare may have known very little about actual Jews and Jewish history, but no one was better equipped to imagine them."-Katharine Craik, Times Literary Supplement (Katharine Craik Times Literary Supplement 20060901)

"Shylock Is Shakespeare is a book whose risk-taking, even obsessive plunge into the living character of Shylock has succeeded in reinventing a mode of criticism long thought derelict and abandoned. Shakespeare's power as a magician-a conjurer able to call forth and release spirits into the world-has rarely seemed as palpable or disturbing as it does in Kenneth Gross's bold and original response."-Stephen Greenblatt, author of Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare (Stephen Greenblatt 20061212)

"Most currently available books about Shylock keep the discussion of this Shakespearean character within the context of the play The Merchant of Venice and seek to illuminate how Shakespeare uses him within the dramatic unity of Merchant. Gross frees Shylock from the play and provides a wide-ranging, extended essay considering that character and his continuing existence in Western consciousness as revealed by his representation in post-Shakespearean performances, fiction, and criticism."-Library Journal (Library Journal 20061222)

"Anyone interested in how one of the most talented Shakespeareans at work today confronts the question `What next?' will want to read his Shylock Is Shakespeare, as innovative and reckless a critical study to appear in a very long time. Like Shakespeare revamping old plots, Gross takes something unfashionable-Victorian character criticism-and turns it into something entirely new: a deeply considered, often-dazzling exploration of Shylock''s `singularity.'. Gross shows us-grippingly and often profoundly-what Shylock has come to mean in our time."-James Shapiro, Bookforum (James Shapiro Bookforum 20070221)

"The mysteries surrounding Shylock naturally attract scholars. A couple of dozen modern books analyze his puzzling role in Shakespeare''s imagination. The latest, Shylock Is Shakespeare (University of Chicago Press), by Kenneth Gross of the University of Rochester, a virtuoso critic, identifies the moneylender with the playwright, making Shylock a character into whom the greatest of all writers poured his own ambivalence, anger and insecurity."-Robert Fulford, National Post (Canada) (Robert Fulford National Post 20071001)

"Dazzling"-Gabriel Sanders, Jewish Daily Forward (Gabriel Sanders Jewish Daily Forward )

"Mr. Gross''s book is a concept-stuffed feat of Nabokovian ratiocination."-Benjamin Ivry, New York Sun (Benjamin Ivry New York Sun )

"In Kenneth Gross''s remarkable Shylock Is Shakespeare . . . we have a one-man commando assault on the critical orthodoxy of the past twenty years. . . . Shylock Is Shakespeare is compelling and honest. There should be much more literary criticism like it: bold, contentious, and speculative, it brims with ideas. Highly recommended."-Andrew Stott, Journal of British Studies (Andrew Stott Journal of British Studies )

"Here we . . . have Gross providing a wealth of insight into Shakespeare''s first problem comedy, leaving us valuable analysis that flies well beyond the rampant references and convinces with its breadth and authority." (Jamison Kantor Virginia Quarterly Review )

"A one-man commando assault on the critical orthodoxy of the past twenty years...Shylock Is Shakespeare is compelling and honest. There should be much more literary criticism like it: bold, contentious, and speculative, it brims with ideas. Highly recommended."-Andrew Stott, Journal of British Studies (Andrew Stott Journal of British Studies )

"Kenneth Gross's Shylock Is Shakespeare is at once an intimate record of one scholar's reading experience and a wide-ranging interpretive engagement with one of Shakespeare's most troubling plays and its afterlife in literature and thought....If Shylock is Shakespeare, Gross unabashedly finds himself in both. This book is intimate without being personal. Gross sounds the depths of his own affiliations with his subject matter, but he never, as it were, wears his circumcised heart on his sleeve. Rather than dip into anecdote or memoir, Gross invites us to enter the generous and thoughtful circle drawn by nothing more or less than the frank and assiduous unfolding of the interpretive process."-Julia Reinhard Lupton, Modern Language Quarterly (Julia Reinhard Lupton Modern Language Quarterly )

"Gross''s suggestions that Shylock serves as a mirror for Shalespeare, Portia, and Antonio are compelling, as are his central chapters on Shylock in his cultural context. Those interested in Shylock''s reception will especially want to read this book." (Gavin T. Richardson Sixteenth Century Journal )

About the Author

Kenneth Gross is professor of English at the University of Rochester. He is the author of many books, including, most recently, Shakespeare’s Noise, also published by the University of Chicago Press.


Customer Reviews

One of America's most talented literary critics5
This book is so far my favorite work of literary criticism in the twenty-first century, and I wholeheartedly recommend it both to literary critics and to those who are merely curious about what exemplary criticism is like. The reader of this book will notice that Gross's work has an unusual literariness, a poetic agility that is subdued almost to what it works in, like the dyer's hand. The book is filled with cryptic parables, fables, conceits, wild wordplay, false genealogies and etymologies, constant allusions, and even a soliloquy. The book is also wide-ranging in a way that much criticism is not: it offers discussions of a number of theatrical performances of the play and compelling discussions of Philip Roth, Heinrich Heine, and Marcel Proust as well as many other writers who have pondered the enigma of Shylock. Among other pleasures, the book also offers a playful fantasy of how Zero Mostel might have played Shylock.

Gross's prose has a syntactic signature which I find myself adopting in this sentence: in his long, beautifully arranged multi-clause sentences one finds, over and over, a string of appositive phrases or other modifiers, phrases which restate an idea, building on it, transforming it, and revealing its many-sided complexity and its inner contradictions. This stylistic trait has analytical and even ethical functions: Gross is an interpreter who suspects even his most compelling assertions of being too simple. I will cite just a few magnificent examples. Here is one: "It is difficult to describe the candor and incandescence of Shylock's stance, his frightening charisma, the way he magnetizes the courtroom even as he stands as an object of scorn." And here is another: "He puts claims for mercy and forgiveness to the test just by making himself so terribly unforgivable; he is as unforgivable as he is unforgiving, refusing the coercions of forgiveness, choosing against its seductive economy or profit (being as it is, in Portia's words, `twice blessed')." And here is another example: "Even if he is referring to a roasted pig, its mouth fixed open by the oven, the word `gaping' makes the thing seem half-alive, staring or taking in air, almost astonished."

This syntactical horn of plenty, this pouring forth of riches, is an appropriate stylistic anchor for a critic who writes on Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Not everyone in the twenty-first century values this kind of abundance, but early modern authors did, and they had a name for this element of Gross's style: they called it amplificatio. The amplificatio is slightly less obtrusive in Gross's Shylock book than in some of his previous work, and I see this reduction as the sign of an internal struggle. If Gross were an allegorical figure, I would be obliged to note at this point that it cannot be accidental that this subtlest of critics is named "Gross." I think that critics, and writers more generally, are often at their most interesting when they are trying to rein in their greatest strengths.

This brings me to my second task: a brief discussion of Gross's project as a critic. Gross is someone who is a Spenserian as well as a Shakespearean. What does it mean to read Shakespeare like a Spenserian? It might also be helpful to think of other critical centaurs, like Harry Berger, Jr., Susanne Wofford, and Patricia Parker. Shakespeareans often feel as if the plays have been thoroughly harvested, with room only for some small incremental gleanings. Spenserians, on the other hand, tend to feel as if every passage in Shakespeare opens up into nearly infinite new vistas. It is probably no accident that Gross, Harry Berger, and Patricia Parker have each written an entire book on a single play (although Professor Parker has, tragically, left hers in her desk drawer). These centaurs think differently than other Shakespeareans do, and there are few enough of them so that they each preside over a large domain. It is undoubtedly irresponsible to generalize about how Spenserians read Shakespeare, but I am tempted to say that what they do differently is to treat individual words as if they were dramatic characters. Or, to put it another way, Spenserians reading Shakespeare treat tropes as if they are people and people as if they are tropes.

Like Harold Bloom, Gross cherishes "All things counter, original, spare, strange." Gross, too, uses the word "uncanny" as a term of the highest praise: he loves opacities, inner darknesses, densities of meaning too compacted for interpretive unpacking. Gross, too, has a critical method that celebrates that which resists interpretation. The differences between Gross and his uncle-father or aunt-mother Bloom, though, are perhaps ultimately more significant than the similarities. When I reread Bloom's discussion of The Merchant of Venice, I was struck by how little close reading he does. Gross is far more interested than Bloom is in the verbal textures of the plays, in dimensions other than the characterological. Gross's Shylock is both a personage and a collection of verbal patterns, both a sentence-generating machine and a human being making an ethical claim on his interlocutors, trying to establish a common space within which a conversation can occur.

In pursuit of Shylock5
Kenneth Gross's Shakespeare Is Shylock is at once an intimate record of one scholar's reading experience and a wide-ranging interpretive engagement with one of Shakespeare's most troubling plays and its afterlife in later literature and thought. Gross is more interested in the fortuitous afterlives of Shylock in allusion, association, and accident than in fully developed recreations and performances, yet his pursuit of Shakespearean happenstance never decays into a mere network of puns and figures. Instead, Gross stays close to his two subjects: to Shylock as a character whose very incompleteness on the stage deposits pockets of mystery that lead us to imagine, inhabit, and reanimate his ambiguous person; and to Shakespeare as a dramatist who, Gross argues, is Shylock's "brother and other." Fiercely, even ardently committed to Shylock and his cause, Gross opens windows for his general readers onto the houndings and humiliations suffered by Renaissance Jewry. Even while tracking the suffering of the Jews, however, Gross absolutely refuses to participate in what he calls "sectarian readings, whether Jewish or Christian" (10). Although Gross does not dispute the anti-Semitism of Shakespeare and company, Shakespeare's ethical limitations give him absolutely no pleasure or power, and his own challenge remains discovering "what it means to keep faith with Shakespeare's fiction" (124): to understand the deep bonds between Shakespeare and Shylock without trying to "save" either creature or creator. To grasp those inadequacies and to find a satisfactory settlement with them is the ethical aim of this brave little book. This book is intimate without being personal. Rather than dipping into anecdote or memoir, Gross invites us to enter the generous and thoughtful circle drawn by nothing more nor less than the frank and assiduous unfolding of the interpretive process. Gross writes of Shylock that he "gives and hazards all the rage he has" (1). I would say of Gross that he gives and hazards all he has by way of literary investment, so that his readers can reap the interest without suffering either coercion or complicity.

"Poseur Alert"2
This may not be the worst book of Shakespearean criticism ever written, but it ranks way up there among the most pretentious. Frequently spurning coherence, Gross regales the reader with endless, often forced parallels to Shakespeare and Shylock that apparently just pop into his mind from his own readings of other writers, ancient and modern. What this lack of intellectual discipline amounts to is less light shed on the author or central character of "The Merchant of Venice," and more on the reading habits of self-absorbed critic Kenneth Gross.