Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Shakespeare Disintegrated: Authoriality, Textuality, Co-Authorship, Biography

View through CrossRef
The article explores one of the most assiduously researched topics in Shakespeare criticism: that of the ways in which Shakespeare’s responsibility as author of the plays that traditionally bear his name has been established. Rehearsing the major contributions to this debate (from the mid-nineteenth-century idea that Shakespeare’s plays were the work of a group of intellectuals, to recent tendencies in attribution studies which dismember the canon on the basis of theories of co-authorship and collaboration), it maintains that one of the most persistent tendencies in the debate has been that of disintegration; and that both the dismembering of the canon as a whole and the amputating of parts of it as collaboratively written have had the paradoxical effect of de-authorialising what are conventionally known as ‘Shakespeare’s plays’.Not simply meant as a historical survey, the article also highlights the fact that, as well as determining effects on the Shakespeare canon, disintegrative tendencies have inspired theories of the text relevant to the construction of authorial identity, and have also generated a fallout on the idea, expressed by bibliographers and textual scholars, that the composition and configuration of texts are inescapably collaborative. Finally, the article maintains that biography too has been affected by a notion of disintegration which insists on a de-personalised subject and the idea that a life, no less than a text, is a socially-composed construct. John Faed, 'Shakespeare and the King's Men' (1851). Public Domain
Title: Shakespeare Disintegrated: Authoriality, Textuality, Co-Authorship, Biography
Description:
The article explores one of the most assiduously researched topics in Shakespeare criticism: that of the ways in which Shakespeare’s responsibility as author of the plays that traditionally bear his name has been established.
Rehearsing the major contributions to this debate (from the mid-nineteenth-century idea that Shakespeare’s plays were the work of a group of intellectuals, to recent tendencies in attribution studies which dismember the canon on the basis of theories of co-authorship and collaboration), it maintains that one of the most persistent tendencies in the debate has been that of disintegration; and that both the dismembering of the canon as a whole and the amputating of parts of it as collaboratively written have had the paradoxical effect of de-authorialising what are conventionally known as ‘Shakespeare’s plays’.
Not simply meant as a historical survey, the article also highlights the fact that, as well as determining effects on the Shakespeare canon, disintegrative tendencies have inspired theories of the text relevant to the construction of authorial identity, and have also generated a fallout on the idea, expressed by bibliographers and textual scholars, that the composition and configuration of texts are inescapably collaborative.
Finally, the article maintains that biography too has been affected by a notion of disintegration which insists on a de-personalised subject and the idea that a life, no less than a text, is a socially-composed construct.
John Faed, 'Shakespeare and the King's Men' (1851).
Public Domain.

Related Results

Biography and Shakespeare’s Money
Biography and Shakespeare’s Money
Robert Bearman’s book Shakespeare’s Money (2016) can be considered the first economic biography of William Shakespeare; but it is also the latest specimen of an innovative trend in...
Plagiarism and Authorship in Turn-of-the-Century Venezuela
Plagiarism and Authorship in Turn-of-the-Century Venezuela
Abstract This article explores the connection between modernismo, a literary movement that relied heavily on imitation and intertextuality, and accusations of plagia...
“A Broken Voice”: Iconic Distress in Shakespeare’s Tragedies
“A Broken Voice”: Iconic Distress in Shakespeare’s Tragedies
Abstract This article explores the change in dynamics between matter and style in Shakespeare’s way of depicting distress on the early modern stage. During his early...
Judith Shakespeare’s Brother
Judith Shakespeare’s Brother
Abstract Virginia Woolf’s account of Shakespeare’s fictional sister, Judith, in A Room of One’s Own offers a productive vantage point for investigating questions of ...
Flights of Fancy and the Dissolution of Shakespearean Space-Time in Angela Carter’s Nights at the Circus
Flights of Fancy and the Dissolution of Shakespearean Space-Time in Angela Carter’s Nights at the Circus
While much attention has been paid to Angela Carter’s intertextual appropriation of Shakespeare and her interrogation of the patriarchal ideology at work in his representations of ...

Back to Top