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Edward Everett Root
John Spiers |
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My Shakespeare: The Authorship Controversy
Experts Examine the Arguments for Bacon, Neville, Oxford, Marlowe, Mary Sidney, Shakspere, and Shakespeare
Why does this issue matter? Because a full understanding of the author can make a huge difference to our wider appreciation of the life and times, the literature, and the culture of the period.
William Shakespeare is universally regarded as the greatest writer who ever lived. Every year sees vast amounts of critical, philosophical and contextual interpretations of his works. There is endless biographical analyses of his life in relation to this work. And yet, despite this vast output, Shakespeare remains an enigmatic figure.
He remains a man who seems to have understood humanity so well but whose life as a writer is absent in records of the time. This truth has led to many questions about the real author behind the title-pages, the real nature of Shakespeare the man, and how this nature relates to Shakespeare the writer.
In new essays especially written for this book nine leading ‘Shakespearean’ authors present their version of the man.
Ros Barber, Barry Clarke, John Casson with William Rubinstein & David Ewald, William Leahy, Alan H. Nelson, Diana Price, Alexander Waugh and Robin Williams each offer their ideas. Each essay is founded in scholarly research and provides a positive case for why the Shakespeare Authorship Controversy needs to be taken seriously.
These versions of Shakespeare are realistic and compelling. Each in its turn will provoke the reader to see various aspects of Shakespeare in a different light. And they will help us understand the enigmatic fascination that Shakespeare (and the authorship question) continues to generate.
CONTENTS:
William Leahy, Introduction.
Alan H. Nelson, William Shakespeare of Stratford-Upon-Avon and London.
Diana Price, My Shakspere: “A Conjectural Narrative” Continued. Alexander Waugh, My Shakespeare Rise!
Ros Barber, My Shakespeare: Christopher Marlowe.
John Casson, William D. Rubinstein and David Ewald, Our Shakespeare: Henry Neville 1562-1615.
Robin Williams, My Shakespeare: Mary Sidney Herbert, the Countess of Pembroke.
Barry Clarke, My Shakespeare: Francis Bacon.
William Leahy, My (amalgamated) Shakespeare.