Question of the Week

One question that kept coming up in the Shakespeare in American Education conference was “Why Shakespeare?”. Why does this one author out of all of the other authors deserve such a place in the canon? Why spend valuable instruction time in school working on Shakespeare? Is Shakespeare useful in teaching other subjects, or is Shakespeare a topic worth studying in its own right?

Can the answer be agreed upon in the same way as “Why arithmetic?” or “Why writing?” pretty much can be? Or is the answer to “Why Shakespeare?” too ineffable to be codified in that way. Can there ever really be an answer? And if there can’t, how can we justify teaching it?

Of course, all of this begs the question, and you may choose instead to answer in the negative. Is Shakespeare’s popularity a result of a social and political construction, and not based on the merit of the work? Is there some grain of truth to the high school student’s suspicion that it’s all just a scam? Is there a more deserving candidate, or is the elevation of a single individual counter-productive to the idea of a canon?

Nevertheless, I ask you…

Why Shakespeare?

One Response to “Question of the Week”

  1. DeLisa Says:

    Must we. Okay fine. How’s this?

    Shakespeare is widely considered the world’s pre-eminent dramatist. He’s certainly the pre-eminent dramatist in the English language. This cannot be argued. He’s also the most performed. Shakespeare’s works have been translated into every major living language and his plays are continually performed all around the world. In addition, Shakespeare is the most quoted writer in English speaking world and many phrases we take for granted find their source in his work. All that is apparent and irrefutable. Here’s more:

    To exclude him from any study of the arts is obviously unthinkable. He’s the pre-eminent influence and innovator in English speaking theatre. His works have influenced not only all subsequent dramatic works, but television, vaudeville, radio plays, and cinema as well. And considering that so many of his works contained standard and borrowed plots (albeit brilliantly executed), he’s worthy of study as a study of the evolution (if not the pinnacle) of theatrical plots in the Renaissance. Plus he covers a gamut of genres: dramas, comedies, romances, histories and was arguably the inventor of tragicomedy (which my theatre history teacher said didn’t exist really until the 20th century but is easily present to at least some regard in the Bard’s “problem plays.”)
    PLUS, he is of the rarest order – the most consistently acclaimed and yet POPULAR artist. There are few of his like – Hitchcock and the Beatles are perhaps are only real 20th Century examples. Studying the economics of the arts must include him for this reason as well.

    To exclude him from any study of English literature is unthinkable. You wouldn’t exclude Moliere from French literature and he in no way had the impact of WS. Nor would you exclude Keats, Yeats, or any other English poet from English literature. If he’d only written the sonnets, that would have been enough to warrant his special inclusion in an educational curriculum.

    Indeed to exclude Shakespeare from any study of English history is unthinkable as his works (the histories, duh) are the best (and most entertaining!) examples we have of how revisionist and contextual histories work as the plays are so pro-Tudor and so pro-Elizabeth (esp. the end of Henry VIII which is just so transparently silly with it’s praise of a daughter that Henry VIII was ungrateful for.)

    And if that’s not enough – to exclude him from any study of “English as a Language” is unthinkable. “It is widely assumed that Shakespeare himself introduced more words into English than all the other writers of his time combined.” (from Wikipedia) And his plays and sonnets are such a vast resource, that even if he didn’t actually invent these words – he is our first printed source of them (hold on to your hats – the list is soooooooo long it should end the debate once and for all):

    Academe
    accessible
    accommodation
    addiction (Shakespeare meant “tendency”)
    admirable
    aerial (Shakespeare meant “of the air”)
    airless
    amazement
    anchovy
    arch-villain
    to arouse
    assassination
    auspicious
    bachelorship (“bachelorhood”)
    to barber
    barefaced
    baseless
    batty (Shakespeare meant “bat-like”)
    beachy (“beach-covered”)
    to bedabble
    to bedazzle
    bedroom (Shakespeare meant “room in bed”)
    to belly (“to swell”)
    belongings
    to besmirch
    to bet
    to bethump
    birthplace
    black-faced
    to blanket
    bloodstained
    bloodsucking
    blusterer
    bodikins (“little bodies”)
    bold-faced
    braggartism
    brisky
    broomstaff (“broom-handle”)
    budger (“one who budges”)
    bump (as a noun)
    buzzer (Shakespeare meant “tattle-tale”)
    to cake
    candle holder
    to canopy
    to cater (as “to bring food”)
    to castigate
    catlike
    to champion
    characterless
    cheap (in pejorative sense of “vulgar”)
    chimney-top
    chopped (Shakespeare meant “chapped”)
    churchlike
    circumstantial
    clutch
    cold-blooded
    coldhearted
    colourful
    compact (as noun “agreement”)
    to comply
    to compromise (Shakespeare meant “to agree”)
    consanguineous (related by blood)
    control (as a noun)
    coppernose (“a kind of acne”)
    countless
    courtship
    to cow (as “intimidate”)
    critical
    cruelhearted
    to cudgel
    Dalmatian
    to dapple
    dauntless
    dawn (as a noun)
    day’s work
    deaths-head
    defeat (the noun)
    to denote
    depositary (as “trustee”)
    dewdrop
    dexterously (Shakespeare spelled it “dexteriously”)
    disgraceful (Shakespeare meant “unbecoming”)
    to dishearten
    to dislocate
    distasteful (Shakespeare meant “showing disgust”)
    distrustful
    dog-weary
    doit (a Dutch coin: “a pittance”)
    domineering
    downstairs
    East Indies
    to educate
    to elbow
    embrace (as a noun)
    employer
    employment
    enfranchisement
    engagement
    to enmesh
    enrapt
    to enthrone
    epileptic
    equivocal
    eventful
    excitement (Shakespeare meant “incitement”)
    expedience
    expertness
    exposure
    eyeball
    eyedrop (Shakespeare meant as a “tear”)
    eyewink
    face (meaning the dial of a clock)
    fair-faced
    fairyland
    fanged
    fap (“intoxicated”)
    farmhouse
    far-off
    fashionable
    fashionmonger
    fathomless (Shakespeare meant “too huge to be encircled by one’s arms”)
    fat-witted
    featureless (Shakespeare meant “ugly”)
    fiendlike
    to fishify (“turn into fish”)
    fitful
    fixture (Shakespeare meant “fixing” or setting “firmly in place”)
    fleshment (“the excitement of first success”)
    flirt-gill (a “floozy”)
    flowery (“full of florid expressions”)
    fly-bitten
    footfall
    foppish
    foregone
    fortune-teller
    foul mouthed
    Franciscan
    freezing (as an adjective)
    fretful
    frugal
    full-grown
    fullhearted
    futurity
    gallantry (Shakespeare meant “gallant people”)
    garden house
    generous (Shakespeare meant “gentle,” “noble”)
    gentlefolk
    glow (as a noun)
    to glutton
    to gnarl
    go-between
    to gossip (Shakespeare meant “to make oneself at home like a gossip – that is, a kindred spirit or a fast friend”)
    grass plot
    gravel-blind
    gray-eyed
    green-eyed
    grief-shot (as “sorrow-stricken”)
    grime (as a noun)
    to grovel
    gust (as a “wind-blast”)
    half-blooded
    to happy (“to gladden”)
    heartsore
    hedge-pig
    hell-born
    to hinge
    hint (as a noun)
    hobnail (as a noun)
    homely (sense “ugly”)
    honey-tongued
    hornbook (an “alphabet tablet”)
    hostile
    hot-blooded
    howl (as a noun)
    to humor
    hunchbacked
    hurly (as a “commotion”)
    to hurry
    idle-headed
    ill-tempered
    ill-used
    impartial
    to impede
    imploratory (“solicitor”)
    import (the noun: “importance” or “significance”)
    inaudible
    inauspicious
    incarnadine (verb: “to make red with blood”; used in Macbeth)
    indirection
    indistinguishable
    inducement
    informal (Shakespeare meant “unformed” or “irresolute”)
    to inhearse (to “load into a hearse”)
    to inlay
    to instate (Shakespeare, who spelled it “enstate,” meant “to endow”)
    inventorially (“in detail”)
    investment (Shakespeare meant as “a piece of clothing”)
    invitation
    invulnerable
    jaded (Shakespeare seems to have meant “contemptible”)
    juiced (“juicy”)
    keech (“solidified fat”)
    kickie-wickie (a derogatory term for a wife)
    kitchen-wench
    lackluster
    ladybird
    lament
    land-rat
    to lapse
    laughable
    leaky
    leapfrog
    lewdster
    loggerhead (Shakespeare meant “blockhead”)
    lonely (Shakespeare meant “lone”)
    long-legged
    love letter
    lustihood
    lustrous
    madcap
    madwoman
    majestic
    malignancy (Shakespeare meant “malign tendency”)
    manager
    marketable
    marriage bed
    militarist (Shakespeare meant “soldier”)
    mimic (as a noun)
    misgiving (sense “uneasiness”)
    misquote
    mockable (as “deserving ridicule”)
    money’s worth (“money-worth” dates from the 14th century)
    monumental
    moonbeam
    mortifying (as an adjective)
    motionless
    mountaineer (Shakespeare meant as “mountain-dweller”)
    to muddy
    neglect (as a noun)
    to negotiate
    never-ending
    newsmonger
    nimble-footed
    noiseless
    nook-shotten (“full of corners or angles”)
    to numb
    obscene (Shakespeare meant “revolting”)
    ode
    to offcap (to “doff one’s cap”)
    offenseful (meaning “sinful”)
    offenseless (“unoffending”)
    Olympian (Shakespeare meant “Olympic”)
    to operate
    oppugnancy (“antagonism”)
    outbreak
    to outdare
    to outfrown
    to out-Herod
    to outscold
    to outsell (Shakespeare meant “to exceed in value”)
    to out-talk
    to out-villain
    to outweigh
    overblown (Shakespeare meant “blown over”)
    overcredulous
    overgrowth
    to overpay
    to overpower
    to overrate
    overview (Shakespeare meant as “supervision”)
    pageantry
    to palate (Shakespeare meant “to relish”)
    pale-faced
    to pander
    passado (a kind of sword-thrust)
    paternal
    pebbled
    pedant (Shakespeare meant a schoolmaster)
    pedantical
    pendulous (Shakespeare meant “hanging over”)
    to perplex
    to petition
    pignut (a type of tuber)
    pious
    please-man (a “yes-man”)
    plumpy (“plump”)
    posture (Shakespeare seems to have meant “position” or “positioning”)
    prayerbook
    priceless
    profitless
    Promethean
    protester (Shakespeare meant “one who affirms”)
    published (Shakespeare meant “commonly recognized”)
    to puke
    puppy-dog
    pushpin (Shakespeare was referring to a children’s game)
    on purpose
    quarrelsome
    in question (as in “the ___ in question”)
    radiance
    to rant
    rascally
    rawboned (meaning “very gaunt”)
    reclusive
    refractory
    reinforcement (Shakespeare meant “renewed force”)
    reliance
    remorseless
    reprieve (as a noun)
    resolve (as a noun)
    restoration
    restraint (as “reserve”)
    retirement
    to reverb (“to re-echo”)
    revokement (“revocation”)
    revolting (Shakespeare meant as “rebellious”)
    to reword (Shakespeare meant “repeat”)
    ring carrier (a “go-between”)
    to rival (meaning to “compete”).
    roadway
    roguery
    rose-cheeked
    rose-lipped
    rumination
    ruttish (horny)
    one’s Salad Days
    sanctimonious
    to sate
    satisfying (as an adjective)
    savage (as “uncivilized”)
    savagery
    schoolboy
    scrimer (“a fence”)
    scrubbed (Shakespeare meant”stunted”)
    scuffle
    seamy (“seamed”) and seamy-side (Shakespeare meant “under-side of a garment”)
    to secure (Shakespeare meant “to obtain security”)
    self-abuse (Shakespeare meant “self-deception”)
    shipwrecked (Shakespeare spelled it “shipwrackt”)
    shooting star
    shudder (as a noun)
    silk stocking
    silliness
    to sire
    skimble-skamble (“senseless”)
    skim milk (in quarto; “skim’d milk” in the Folio)
    slugabed (one who sleeps in)
    to sneak
    soft-hearted
    spectacled
    spilth (“something spilled”)
    spleenful
    sportive
    to squabble
    stealthy
    stillborn
    to subcontract (Shakespeare meant “to remarry”)
    successful
    suffocating (as an adjective)
    to sully
    to supervise (Shakespeare meant “to peruse”)
    to swagger
    tanling (someone with a tan)
    tardiness
    time-honored
    title page
    tortive (“twisted”)
    to torture
    traditional (Shakespeare meant “tradition-bound”)
    tranquil
    transcendence
    trippingly
    unaccommodated
    unappeased
    to unbosom
    unchanging
    unclaimed
    uncomfortable (sense “disquieting”)
    to uncurl
    to undervalue (Shakespeare meant “to judge as of lesser value”)
    to undress
    unearthy
    uneducated
    to unfool
    unfrequented
    ungoverned
    ungrown
    to unhappy
    unhelpful
    unhidden
    unlicensed
    unmitigated
    unmusical
    to un muzzle
    unpolluted
    unpremeditated
    unpublished (Shakespeare meant “undisclosed”)
    unquestionable (Shakespeare meant “impatient”)
    unquestioned
    unreal
    unrivaled
    unscarred
    unscratched
    to unsex (verb: “to [in its context] make a woman unwomanly (that she might do deeds of men (murder)”; said by Lady Macbeth, in her husband’s play)
    unsolicited
    unsullied
    unswayed (Shakespeare meant “unused” and “ungoverned”)
    untutored
    unvarnished
    unwillingness (sense “reluctance”)
    upstairs
    useful
    useless
    valueless
    varied (as an adjective)
    varletry
    vasty
    vulnerable
    watchdog
    water drop
    water fly
    weird
    well-behaved
    well-bred
    well-educated
    well-read
    to widen (Shakespeare meant “to open wide”)
    wittolly (“contentedly a cuckhold”)
    worn out (Shakespeare meant “dearly departed”)
    wry-necked (“crook-necked”)
    yelping (as an adjective)
    zany (a clown’s sidekick or a mocking mimic)

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