Was Shakespeare a woman? | The Chris Hedges Report

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  • @noah5291
    @noah5291 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Winkler comes off as a mainstream Bourgeois pseudo academic, this doesn't come off as revolutionary or rebellious to anyone except people who's fingernails are always nice looking and have never slept outside.

    • @MsColl90
      @MsColl90 ปีที่แล้ว

      ‘Slept outside’?

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade ปีที่แล้ว +2

      She might have done some light glamping.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว

      Part of the Woke Feminista agenda, and there's Chris Hedges solidly behind it!! LOL!

  • @Majoofi
    @Majoofi ปีที่แล้ว +17

    This is ridiculous.
    What this discussion seems to be lacking is any evidence of either why Shakespeare was a front, or of who else might have written the works. The renegades get pushed to the margins because they have no evidence. Was it just click bate, or did Chris forget to ask about why Winkler thinks a woman, which woman wrote the plays?
    I expect much more from Chris

    • @Alacrates
      @Alacrates ปีที่แล้ว +1

      She doesn't think the Shakespeare works were written by a woman. The title is Shakespeare was a Woman and Other Heresies. It's about why the subject is taboo in academia.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@Alacrates Except that she fails to identify the correct reason it's 'taboo' by asking the wrong question. First, she needs to ask if it actually is taboo or if the whole subject has not yet proven itself worthy of the attention of academics. Winkler is like those creationists who whine that biology departments don't offer classes in "creation science" or "intelligent design".
      And in her original _Atlantic_ article she did indeed plump for the authorship claims of Emilia Lanier, ignorantly asserting that no woman had ever been considered before when in fact Queen Elizabeth I; Anne Hathaway; Mary Herbert, the Countess of Pembroke; and even the scribal error "Anne Whateley" had been proposed as authors for decades. If she'd been honest with herself rather than being a convinced Shakespeare-denier already (despite her dishonest claims to be new to this subject as of her _Atlantic_ article, she was an invited panel speaker at the 2018 Shakespeare Authorship Trust session on "Gender, Shakespeare, and Authorship, while her _Atlantic_ article wouldn't be published until the following year), she would have seen the reason that alternative authorship claims founder is because they're not supported by any valid evidence.

    • @Alacrates
      @Alacrates ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Nullifidian She made a case for why the authorship question is taboo. I know you don't agree with her argument, but she presented an argument.
      I agree with her on this. I don't think the authorship question is solved by any means, I don't think it's been proven that William of Stratford didn't or couldn't have written the works attributed to him.
      I also don't think Stratfordians have come close to dispelling the authorship question as a legitimate grounds for inquiry. I don't think it should be a taboo in academia.
      I don't think this issue is like intelligent design vs. evolution. It's a literary & historical question, not a scientific one.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@Alacrates Evolution is also a historical question, though at least we can see the process in ongoing action in the present day. But the overwhelming majority of the process took place in the past and can only be evaluated by the present evidence that the past process left.
      Now I'm going to ask something that might sound ruder than it is intended to be, but what does it matter what you think? Are you an expert in the early modern period and its dramatists? And what evidence do you have to support what you think? Because a lot of people believe things very sincerely on insufficient evidence and yet their sincere beliefs do not constitute a challenge to accepted scholarship on the subject. If the standard is going to be what laymen with no personal expertise in the subject sincerely believe, then not only would one have to open the doors to creationism, but one would also have to open it to geocentrism, the flat earth, relativity-denial, the existence of Atlantis as a real sunken continent, ESP, pyramid power, crystal healing, Bigfoot, Nessie, Mothman, ghosts, extraterrestrial visitations, political leaders as shape-shifting reptilian aliens, and the idea that 1,000 years of European history was simply invented by 17th century Jesuits, to say nothing of many less savory beliefs.
      If you aren't an expert in the subject and you don't have any solid evidence, then is it really evidence of a 'taboo' that the ideas you share haven't achieved traction in academia? Are academics supposed to give their assent to anything that any rando off the street dreams up? This is particularly the case when the people putting forward the alternate theory haven't bothered to engage with any of the serious "orthodox" scholarship that has been published, and many of them haven't bothered to read the works of Shakespeare's contemporaries nor even the works of Shakespeare himself since they were last assigned to them in high school or college. What are _real_ scholars supposed to think of such a performance?

    • @Alacrates
      @Alacrates ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Nullifidian I'm not saying scholars should pay attention to what I think, I'm saying I think there shouldn't be a taboo against scholars investigating the authorship question in a professional capacity.
      I don't think non-academics should simply accept what professors have concluded, especially not on a literary historical question (for something like engineering say, I'd be more wary of course.)
      I haven't come across many active authorship skeptics who aren't passionate about Shakespeare, who read & view performances of the works regularly. For myself, renaissance literature and history makes up the majority of what I read, and I don't feel that's unusual at all among the people that I talk about this with.

  • @stanleyrogouski
    @stanleyrogouski ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I do think Shakespeare probably benefitted from a lot of improv with his actors, many of whom had probably travelled and some of whom probably dropped out of the university or studied law. The plays were works in progress during his lifetime and evolved as they were repeatedly staged.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade ปีที่แล้ว +1

      There isn't any evidence that his fellow actors had much education, but they definitely did travel. Three of them entertained the royal court in Denmark, for example. Living in one of the most cosmopolitan cities in the world, Shakespeare would not have lacked for information about places abroad, and yet he still managed to get nearly everything wrong about Italy.

  • @strezztechnoid
    @strezztechnoid ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is your opportunity Chris, you hold out your Christian religiosity uncritically, The problems relative to Jesus alone, from birth to resurrection is scant of evidence and substantiation. I find that Shakespearian influences on modernity in contrast to Christianity's claims more than problematic. The inerrant word of God, isn/t. Extraordinary claims requires as extraordinary evidence.

  • @geoffknox597
    @geoffknox597 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The authorship question comes from a sincere desire to know the man whose work we love so much. We know nothing about Shakespeare the man. So we look for potential authors that we do know and look for ways to attribute the plays to them. It’s an illogical exercise and has proved fruitless. Every potential candidate put forward doesn’t stand up to the least bit of scrutiny. That female harvard scholar was right to put her effort in the plays themselves and not worry about the author. We just don’t know Shakespeare and we never will, other than, through his plays.

  • @lawrencekagan8688
    @lawrencekagan8688 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wow, Chris Hedges and Real News Network giving in to programming conspiracy nonsense to get clicks. Miss the days of Paul Jay...

  • @MsColl90
    @MsColl90 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    This is interesting but! They skirt around the only real contemporary evidence of who wrote the plays. Shakespeare’s contemporaries and collaborators in the Kings Men theatre company acknowledged his authorship when they published the first folio.

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Read the book.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Wrong. NONE of the literary luminaries of the time even knew who Shakespeare was PRIOR to his first plays being introduced at the theaters. They typically kept company with each other, but NONE of them had ever heard of Shakespeare!!! This is strong evidence in favor of alternative authorship.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@mysticone1798 So his contemporaries only knew who he was after he became a well-known thanks to his successful plays, and they didn't psychically intuit his existence prior to his doing anything to bring himself to their attention. Thanks for that, Captain Obvious.

    • @andy-the-gardener
      @andy-the-gardener 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      wrong. ben johnson wrote the preface, commissioned by de veres daughter and wife, and the first folio was paid for by the earls of pembroke. those actors were mentioned by johnson to sow requisite levels of confusion, but they could never have afforded to pay for its publication. only very wealthy aristocrats could have possibly done that. and we absolutely know deveres family were involved. its proof enough by itself who wrote the works, but there are hundreds of other pieces of evidence besides that.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@andy-the-gardener "and the first folio was paid for by the earls of pembroke."
      What is your evidence for this claim? The colophon on the last page of the First Folio tells us who paid for the publication: "Printed at the Charges of W. Jaggard, Ed. Blount, W. Aspley, and I. Smethweeke, 1623." Nobody has ever claimed that John Heminges and Henry Condell personally paid for the First Folio themselves.
      This could be stuffed and mounted as the type specimen of anti-Shakespearian arguments. Rather than looking at the evidence, you simply lead with an assumption that "only very wealthy aristocrats could have possibly" financed the production of the First Folio and you twist the historical record to suit your assumptions accordingly. If your assumption disagrees with the evidence, then it history itself that must be wrong, because god knows you cannot possibly be wrong, even though you don't know anything about the relevant era.

  • @algernonsidney8746
    @algernonsidney8746 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    How is this episode even real? Shakespeare existed and was a man that is a fact, in the same manner that Charles Darwin existed. There is not a shred of evidence to suggest that Shakespeare was not the real author of his work or that he was a woman . Had Shakespeare not been the real author of his work or had he been a woman someone would have pointed that out back when he was alive and history would have know about it.
    Initially the theory of Shakespeare not being the real playwright of his works was an elitist conspiracy theory put out by people who could not believe that a man who left school at the age of 12 and never went to university was coincidentally one of the greatest writers of the English language.
    Elizabeth Winkler has decided to take it up a notch and claim that Shakespeare did wright his works but he may not have been a man. Frankly I am not sure which one is more insulting.
    There are plenty of brilliant female writers throughout history. Winkler could have written about any one of them instead she decided to waste everyone's time and hers by writing this bizarre essay.

    • @avlasting3507
      @avlasting3507 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I think you've missed the point entirely.

    • @andy-the-gardener
      @andy-the-gardener 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      you clearly know nothing about the authorship question. there is a huge amount of absolute proof now that de vere wrote shakespeare. i suggest you peruse some of the presentations by alexander waugh.

  • @SkopjanecMartin
    @SkopjanecMartin ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Yeah, literally a good reason to not engage with this channel anymore, or should I wait for you to start entertaining pyramid conspiracies as well?

  • @PhatLvis
    @PhatLvis ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Textual/stylistic comparison (even by the casual reader) eliminates most, if not all, of the Concealed Author candidates - such as, for instance, Marlowe; simply put: Marlowe is no Shakespeare. Broadly, the slate of popular candidates (Oxford, Bacon, et al) can be all but eliminated circumstantially as well. Alternative Authorship theories have been more like the claims of cryptozoologists than moon-landing doubters - harder to disprove definitively, but generally just as fanciful.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This is especially true now that we have computer-aided stylometry, which can be used across a range of quantifiable variables (e.g., frequency of light endings, frequency of contractions, etc.), and we have advances in the digital humanities like the latest edition of Early English Books Online (EEBO) with metadata (author, date, part of speech, etc.) that makes the job of stylometric analysis both easier and more precise. These advances haven't really come down to the rank-and-file Shakespeare denier yet (hell, they're still astonished by the fact that one can root literary analysis in something other than biography), but the writing is on the wall.
      We also have the three manuscript pages of Hand D of _Sir Thomas More_ linked with Shakespeare's signatures by paleographic analysis (and he signed his name to documents that identify him as being of Stratford-upon-Avon and a gentleman, and even being 48 years of age in 1612 in the _Bellot v. Mountjoy_ deposition) and the passage is a stylometric match for the rest of the Shakespeare canon. So it's really game over. They can go on playing their parlor games of trying to find biographical parallels or hidden codes, but unless they're dealing with _this_ evidence then they've lost.

    • @andy-the-gardener
      @andy-the-gardener 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      rubbish. there is no writing from this bloke from stratford at all to compare anything with. the only shakey thing about william shaksper are his dodgy signatures. by far the best candidate is de vere who has now pretty much unofficially been accepted as the true author. its ludicrous even giving the stratford hypothesis the time of day any more. there is literally zero evidence the bloke could even write. but theres hundreds of good reasons why it was de vere. the two candidates are not remotely comparable. but the stratford myth is worth half a billion quid a year, so the tired old fable is perpetuated

  • @miyojewoltsnasonth2159
    @miyojewoltsnasonth2159 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    6:14 "And there's no trace of how he acquired this knowledge. It's sort of miraculous."
    It's hardly "miraculous." There are plenty of people who acquire knowledge by reading deeply and independently of university courses.
    *Most people would consider Einstein to be fairly knowledgeable, right? But he barely had any formal education past high school.*

    • @gortnicktu3177
      @gortnicktu3177 ปีที่แล้ว

      Actually, that's not true. Google is your friend.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah, I've got to pull you up on this. Einstein had an earned doctorate that he was awarded in 1906 (though his doctoral dissertation had been submitted and approved in the previous calendar year).
      A better illustration is Ben Jonson. He was Shakespeare's younger contemporary and widely recognized as one of the most knowledgeable Classicists of his era. But he had no university education and was pulled out of school at 16 to be apprenticed into the bricklayer's trade against his will by his stepfather.

    • @horaceosirian8993
      @horaceosirian8993 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That there are plenty of people who acquire deep and broad knowledge independently of formal education is unarguably true beyond question, and in every single instance, except perhaps one, irrelevant to the topic, because none of those people were William Shakespeare, and while their knowledge & erudition might be remarkable, it's hardly a miracle.
      What's miraculous isn't _that_ it happened (supposedly), rather that it happened without leaving any trace whatsoever, and a litany of confusing, suspiciously incongruous, counter-intuitive areas of evidence, which, interestingly enough, is a situation maintained by academic & professional gatekeepers who police the boundaries of education & debate viciously, and seemingly automatically & somewhat independently, suppressing genuine enquiry into the truth, and evidence thereof.

    • @bdhjbazekduve
      @bdhjbazekduve 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Remember this was late 16th century. How do you get to know latin literature unless you have access to an extensive library? How do you get acess to a library unless you went to college and/or are from a rich family? etc. We nowadays have access to almost infinite knowledge via a computer and internet connexion but this is fairly recent. Knowledge used to be kept behind locked doors.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bdhjbazekduve "How do you get to know latin literature unless you have access to an extensive library?"
      By studying the grammar school curriculum. It was literally a _grammar_ school: a school where you learned the grammar and accidence of Latin through the study of its literature, both classical Latin literature and neo-Latin literature like the works of Erasmus and Mantuan. The grammar school system had been in operation for decades by the time of Shakespeare's youth, having been originally created to counteract the brain drain caused by the Protestant Reformation and the dissolution of the monasteries. Most of those literate monks went back to Rome, so Henry VIII needed a new literate middle class pronto. The grammar school system was so successful that Francis Bacon was worried that they were creating generations of _overeducated_ Britons and not enough men who would be willing to spend the rest of their lives tilling the soil and doing other forms of manual labor.
      "How do you get acess to a library unless you went to college and/or are from a rich family? etc."
      By being in London, where there was an effective "library" of bookstalls on and around St. Paul's churchyard. In the case of Shakespeare, he had an in with Richard Field, who took over the print shop of his master Thomas Vautrollier, by marrying the master's widow. Field was the man Shakespeare entrusted to print the first editions of _Venus and Adonis_ and _The Rape of Lucrece_ , and most of Shakespeare's sources come from the back catalogue of the Vautrollier and Field print shop, as Geoffrey Bullough showed in _The Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare_ . In addition, some works that weren't printed there, like the second edition of Holinshed's _Chronicles_ , were still something that Field could have gotten his hands on by other means. To use the _Chronicles_ as an example, he was apprenticed to one of the printers of the consortium that produced the book and his period of apprenticeship encompassed the entire period it took to print that book. Many printers were paid in kind with expensive folio editions of books to keep the cost of the wages down.
      Furthermore, I think you vastly overestimate the need Shakespeare had for a massive library. There is a way of learning things other than going to the library, and London was a great place for it. For example, if you wanted to learn what the rich and aristocratic were buying, you could walk to Thomas Gresham's Royal Exchange. Keep walking down to Lime Street and you could discuss poisons, medicines, and botany with the French and Dutch apothecaries there. When you were tired of browsing around the bookshops of St. Paul's, you could go down Duke Humphrey's Walk and meet soldiers turned off from the wars on the Continent looking for any work, legitimate or otherwise, that was going, or who were just looking for a handout. The practice was so common that begging a dinner was known as "dining with Duke Humphrey". Stand them a meal and you could learn all the military tactics and history the books would teach you. Walk down to Bishopsgate in the afternoon and you would meet the Venetian glassblowers at what a visiting Italian called "their Rialto hour" and you could chat to them about Italy. And on your walk back to the theatres on the Bankside, you would see the ships rigging up in the Thames just yards from the playhouses. Shakespeare didn't need the internet because he had London.

  • @geoffreynhill2833
    @geoffreynhill2833 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Hi, Chris! I don't think authors in those days were lionised in the way they've become since. Moreover, the mere fact that Shakespeare was literate would have put him well ahead of the game in Elizabethan times. His near-contemporary Aubrey noted that Will's father wasn't a butcher but a man of some civic consequence and that The Bard himself had sufficient education to be a schoolmaster. We should also bear in mind that "theatre" wasn't the spiffy thing it is today, it was the TV and Movies of that time.😉(Green Fire, UK)

    • @zarni000
      @zarni000 ปีที่แล้ว

      You are very superficial in your reasoning

    • @seanh4841
      @seanh4841 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@zarni000 So is your comment

    • @albertfinster4093
      @albertfinster4093 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It beats "Someone else did it, I know for sure, but I don't know who, I don't know how, I don't know why, I don't know when, but I definitely do know. So stop asking questions that make sense."@@zarni000

    • @paulwooton4390
      @paulwooton4390 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@seanh4841right. What was the "superficial" part of the original post?

    • @seanh4841
      @seanh4841 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@paulwooton4390 You've just proven the point I made. No substance.

  • @stanleyrogouski
    @stanleyrogouski ปีที่แล้ว +6

    If you doubt that an actor like Shakespeare could master the law, I would suggest you read a book about Francis Drake and take a look at a reconstruction of The Golden Hind. How in the world did Drake sail around the world in that? Perhaps Elizabethan "man" was simply more daring and less specialized than modern man. Or let's look at the 19th Century. Both Lincoln and Frederick Douglass mastered the English language in a way the typical Harvard grad today could only dream of, yet neither went to high school.

    • @castlerock58
      @castlerock58 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Why couldn't he just research the character and read some law books and ask some lawyers if his manuscript got the law right? If not, he could make the changes suggested by the lawyer. Maybe some of his fans were lawyers and they were happy to talk to him. How do modern writers write characters without any knowledge in the character's field of expertise? Shakespeare didn't need enough law to argue a case in court. He just needed enough to make a character sound like they had mastered the law. He just needed to imagine some dispute that some characters had and find out what the law says about that situation and write it into his play.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@castlerock58 Also, it's worth pointing out that Shakespeare's legalisms are no more abundant than in the works of most of his early modern colleagues. His legal expertise was overstated by 19th century lawyers and judges-cum-dilettante literary scholars who wanted to claim the National Poet for their profession and also by Baconians who wanted to argue that Francis Bacon, who was a trained lawyer, wrote the works. Neither of them bothered to contextualize the works of Shakespeare in their historical era, nor could they until beginning the late 19th century because the plays of Shakespeare's contemporaries were long out of print.
      But yes, there were many people he could have asked and books he could have read. Ben Jonson read Plowden's _Commentaries_ to write _The Case is Altered_ , so Shakespeare could have as well. In this respect, it's also worth noting that one of the books that might have William Shakespeare's signature in it is _Archainomia_ by William Lambarde, a study of ancient British law. The case for its authenticity is compelling, because the title page where the signature occurs was bent and folded over and nobody knew it existed until the Folger Library acquired it and straightened the page out. The previous owner, ironically, was a Baconian and he never mentioned the signature. Furthermore, the signature is over a printed design that renders it almost invisible to the eye, so if a forger were attempting to make a fake, they chose a strange place to do it, and it's odd that it was never made a selling point, since jacking up the price is the usual reason for forgeries. However, it would have been perfectly visible in Shakespeare's day because printer's ink was made with lampblack and linseed oil, but Shakespeare would have likely used iron gall ink (given the bleed-through on the page), which would have originally shown as very dark against the printed pattern.
      Plus, the lawyers did love a play. One of Shakespeare's plays was originally written for the Christmas Revels at Gray's Inn: _The Comedy of Errors_ . And some of the lawyers loved plays so much that they became playwrights. John Webster, John Marston, and Francis Beaumont were among some of the people who had studied at the Inns of Court but thrown over the law for literature, and Thomas Kyd was originally a "noverint", which is an early modern term for a legal scrivener (from the common legal formula _noverint universi per praesentes_ , "know all men by these presents").
      And, there's also the fact that Shakespeare's own father, John, was a justice of the peace and a magistrate in Stratford-upon-Avon. It was because of his civic duties in that line that he was given a coat of arms in 1596, which made William a second-generation gentleman, and thus entitled to be styled a gentleman or "gentle" (think "gentle Shakespeare" in Ben Jonson's poem in the frontispiece of the First Folio), and addressed as Master, Mr., or M., and all three modes of address are used in the First Folio alone.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 23 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      As usual we have to address a strawman argument. It's not that doubters "don't think an actor could master the law." We just bring up and acknowledge the fact that there is zero evidence *the Stratfordian* DID master the law. Just as there is zero evidence for many other claims made about him that are needed to reconcile him with the author (whoever he was).

  • @matthewkopp2391
    @matthewkopp2391 ปีที่แล้ว +55

    The one thing I can guarantee is the plays were written in collaboration with the troupe. Plays still are. You don’t know what you got until you work shop it. The idea of the single brilliant playwright is 19th century English empire convention. Actors workshop the work but also go out for a beer and a great joke gets added to the play.

    • @DanEMO592
      @DanEMO592 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      It kinda sounds like comedians writing a sketch together.

    • @KingMinosxxvi
      @KingMinosxxvi ปีที่แล้ว +8

      In collaboration as a means of inspiration yes. But poetry (all of the actual words) are so singular that they clearly come for one person. This is the most prolific voice in all of literature and is tottally distinct from any other playwrite. However the troupe is certainly a continual catalyst...which of course would mean S was not a woman.

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KingMinosxxviyou just said the poetic aspects were clearly from a single person. Why not a woman?

    • @KingMinosxxvi
      @KingMinosxxvi ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@xofpi If he drew inspiration from being in ongoing collaboration with theatre ...that is to say acting and directing..he couldn't have been a woman because there were no women in the theatre of Shakespeare's time and place . (other people who sew comsutmes and sold beer)

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KingMinosxxviThat’s based on an “if,” which of course doesn’t rule out other sources of inspiration (travel to Italy, life experience, reading of classical and contemporary literature in multiple languages, etc.), which of course does not rule out a woman as one possible author.

  • @richardburt9812
    @richardburt9812 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Chris, you were do not know what you are talking about. You should have had James Shapiro of Columbia University and Marjorie Garber of Harvard University on your show. This is an embarrassing episode. I teach Shakespeare at UF, btw. Got my Ph.D. at U.C. Berkeley in 1984. Stephen Greenblatt, now at Harvard, directed my dissertation. None of these famous scholars do not in any way fit the name-free, baseless, ugly, and contemptuous description you give of Shakespeareans at the beginning of your episode. She say she interviewed a lot of Shakespeare scholars. Why were they never named? Virginia Woolf wrote on Shakespeare's sister.

    • @Marius_vanderLubbe
      @Marius_vanderLubbe ปีที่แล้ว

      That you were afforded a Ph.D. with your own penmanship in 1984 is an indication of how long the system has been broken. These awards are given away like black belts in the martial arts.

    • @brianbutler3318
      @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Thank you Richard Burr for helping me extinguish this most recent anti-Shakespeare BS. Very disappointed in Chris. I love him but now I am seeing him in a different light.

    • @Alacrates
      @Alacrates ปีที่แล้ว

      She includes interviews with Stanley Wells, Stephen Greenblatt, and Marjorie Garber in the book. She requested interviews with Jonathan Bate and James Shapiro, but they refused the requests. She does cover James Shapiro and his correspondence with Justice John Paul Stevens in the book.

  • @karennielsen9248
    @karennielsen9248 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I sent this to my brother who replied that he took his Shakespeare classes from Greenblatt at Berkeley in the 80s and that the whole class was about asking questions about how Elizabethan society produced such writing and who the author of the plays was, etc. He thought it was strange that he should now be held up as one of the priesthood preaching the single man author theory.

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Because he’s since written books arguing for that maybe?

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +7

      The answer to that is that Shakespeare authorship deniers (hereafter SADs) are not interested in what _really_ is taught in literary studies these days. Instead, they like to straw-man the field and claim that commonplaces of literary history and criticism are the panicked responses of a collapsing paradigm.
      For example, I've seen SADs claim that the wide acceptance of co-authorship in early and late Shakespeare plays reflects a retreat in the face of the authorship juggernaut, when in fact Nicholas Rowe, Shakespeare's first 18th century editor, claimed that _Pericles_ was co-authored as early as 1709. George Wilkins was identified as the probable co-author in the mid-19th century, which is also when it was established that _Henry VIII_ was a collaboration between John Fletcher and William Shakespeare. Not to mention that the first quarto of _The Two Noble Kinsmen_ (1634) was attributed on its title page to John Fletcher and William Shakespeare and that there was a similar attribution of co-authorship by these two of _Cardenio_ in the Stationers' Register in 1653.
      They also think that not emphasizing biography in literary criticism is a response to there allegedly not being any biographical support for Shakespeare's authorship, when in fact it's a field-wide approach for _all_ authors that is the result of formalist modes of criticism arising over a century ago. Biographical criticism went out with ladies' finishing schools and the daguerreotype.

    • @smaycock2
      @smaycock2 ปีที่แล้ว

      🤣

    • @karennielsen9248
      @karennielsen9248 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah - he gets that. He’s surprised the guy changed his entire theory.

  • @wolfwilliams
    @wolfwilliams ปีที่แล้ว +2

    No explanation is necessary, or even interesting. Why do we NEED to know every detail of Shakespeare's process, writing career, etc.? The work is all.

  • @anastar37
    @anastar37 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Enjoyable discussion, but not as enjoyable as just reading a play.

  • @libysehcsav5661
    @libysehcsav5661 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is very painful to listen to. I support people who go against the grain for research, but personally think these are very weak arguments. I mean, many, many people don't go to college and they can still write or know history etc. That's so week to think that Shakespeare wasn't a self made man in that respect. Also just because things were not all written down about him doesn't mean anything except that he didn't write them down nor did anyone else either. Think of all the early queens of England who have nothing even in the court documents - to say anything except maybe some bills for clothing, or their personal spending. This is the mystery, that's why it's ok to search and question, but I find this to be repugnant. I choose to believe that he did write his plays, poetry, etc.

  • @George_in_Howden
    @George_in_Howden ปีที่แล้ว +12

    To be a man, or not to be, that is the question. I think the whole world knows the answer.

  • @qarljohnson4971
    @qarljohnson4971 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Yeah I suspect that most of Shakespeare's oevre was a collective effort.
    There are some rather curious tales about his grave(s).
    One of my fave bookstore's name, "Shakespeare & Company" on the Paris Left Bank, twigged me to this possibility.

  • @miyojewoltsnasonth2159
    @miyojewoltsnasonth2159 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    00:33 I studied literature at the University of Toronto. Maybe those of us in Canada are different than Americans and Brits, but we talked fairly extensively (5 or 6 one-hour lectures) in my Shakespeare course about the possibility that somebody besides William Shakespeare wrote the plays and sonnets attributed to him. That was in the mid- to late-1990s.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Speaking as an American, I'm glad that my experience in Shakespeare classes was different. If I had to sit through 5-6 hours of discussion of completely unfounded and unevidenced pseudo-historical drivel it would strike me as being like a biology course devoting several class sessions to the proposition that God separately created all living species 6,000 years ago.

    • @castlerock58
      @castlerock58 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Nullifidian
      It might be a useful exercise if the professor showed the students why it is pseudo-historical drivel. They are bound to have heard of the conspiracy theories. Universities are no longer teaching critical thinking. The basic conspiracy theory argument is easily refuted by pointing out examples of people who had some of the greatest minds in history despite having little formal education. Abraham Lincoln had little more formal education than the Bard and he did not need some aristocrat to write his speeches. They are among the greatest speeches ever written in English or any other language. Lincoln was a genius with access to books. That is all Shakespeare needed to be.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@castlerock58 I'm not sure I agree, on the principle that the way most people at university encounter Shakespeare is through literature class, where discussing historiographic methods would just be a distraction from the focus of the class. However, if they're studying the early modern period as a historical period, then they should be able to understand why Shakespeare authorship denial is bad history, but then that would ideally something they could work out for themselves because the flaws are not exactly subtle in most of the deniers' arguments. Even as a high school student participating on a Shakespeare newsgroup I could see the flaws in the authorship claims, albeit I was unusually interested in this era of literature already-hence my participation there.

  • @MenelausMO
    @MenelausMO ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Surprisingly for a show devoted to politics and specifically class warfare and class consciousness this interview never touched on the idea that the anti stratfordians held it unlikely a poor middle class man of Shakespeare’s background could never have written the plays was a staple of English class snobbishness

    • @castlerock58
      @castlerock58 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Abraham Lincoln was born in a log cabin and was dirt poor but he ended up as the greatest US president and wrote some of the greatest speeches in the English language. One of the greatest mathematicians in history was a clerk in India in the 1880's. He had only been educated at the local school. I doubt Homer had an education as we understand it. Really great minds can figure a lot out for themselves. If a mind like that has access to books, they can do anything.. Being one of the ten smartest people of your century matters more than your class. Formal education may not make that much difference to a mind like that.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That's the usual "snob" strawman -- that the claim is "a poor middle class person couldn't have written great literature." In all my years involved in the authorship question, I have never once heard that claimed by a doubter. That is how the argument is rewritten and generalized out to avoid looking at what the issue really is -- which is: There is little to no evidence that *this one particular individual* had the experience and education necessary to write *that one particular body of work* . That's it.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@niemann3942 And the reason for doubt about his experience and education is that "this one particular individual" was not a member of the aristocracy. The fact that they're not raising equivalent doubts about all of the Bankside playwrights is precisely because they're snobs: they only want to deal with the _best_ . They couldn't care about the second and third ranks of playwrights. Plus, most of them are so ignorant that they're barely aware Shakespeare had any contemporaries in the drama. It's impossible to get them to read anything by Shakespeare's fellow playwrights and damn hard enough to get them to even read Shakespeare himself. Most authorship deniers charge into the debate with no greater understanding of the works than that provided by their high school or undergraduate curriculum.

  • @stevepotter145
    @stevepotter145 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    “You came to talk about the play,” he said. “Let me discourage you. It was written to entertain people. Like horror movies. It isn’t literature, it doesn’t mean anything. Wharfinger was no Shakespeare.”
    “Who was he?” she said.
    “Who was Shakespeare. It was a long time ago.” -- Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49

    • @ulquiorra4cries
      @ulquiorra4cries ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The Courier's Tragedy is singly the most amusing thing I've ever read

  • @Yogiholic
    @Yogiholic ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Chris really screwed the pooch and shit the bed on this one hard - lost loads of respect for the guy. Far and away the best explanation is that facts about Shakespeare’s life have been lost to time. Far greater than, a vast conspiracy during his lifetime to conceal the true author of his works, which don’t reveal particular depth of learning and are replete with anachronisms and historical errors.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Not to mention geographical ones. He gets nearly everything about Italy wrong. And this a guy whose theater was a block from one of the busiest seaports in the world.

    • @JohnAllenRoyce
      @JohnAllenRoyce ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Can't believe this clickbait garbage came from Hedges. Tons of respect lost.

  • @violinhunter2
    @violinhunter2 ปีที่แล้ว +59

    My understanding is that William was actually a 10 year old little girl when he wrote all of her stuff. It only took her 3 years to write all of it and then she went ahead and became a four star chef and finally a relief pitcher for the Detroit Tigers, which is what she really wanted to do since age 3.

    • @jaired9823
      @jaired9823 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Hilarious. Thank you for this (and that).

    • @clonie9963
      @clonie9963 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      😂

    • @ThatMans-anAnimal
      @ThatMans-anAnimal ปีที่แล้ว

      Mary Sue hollywood trope sneaking into our historical revisionism now.

    • @terryrobinson2324
      @terryrobinson2324 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      well done

    • @kenjohnson6326
      @kenjohnson6326 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Thank you. This absolutely makes it as much sense as the drivel on this episode.

  • @dropperknot
    @dropperknot ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Would you Americans, you who are without history, Kindly keep your noses out of English history. We have recorded our history for countless centuries.If we say it is so, it IS so. Stop making yourselves look silly. Shakespeare is 'The Bard of Stratford on Avon'. And shall forever be so.

    • @Jerry-ss3ms
      @Jerry-ss3ms ปีที่แล้ว

      How's your London history working out now that you have a middle eastern leader and probable maiority

    • @avlasting3507
      @avlasting3507 ปีที่แล้ว

      You're being sarcastic, right?

    • @dropperknot
      @dropperknot ปีที่แล้ว

      @@avlasting3507 Wrong !!!!

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Jerry-ss3ms Rishi Sunak was born in Southampton and his parents are Punjabi. I'm not sure why you think Central Asia has suddenly moved, but India is _not_ and has never been the Mideast. And though his parents were part of the Punjabi diaspora community, neither of _them_ were born in the Mideast either. His father was born in Nairobi, Kenya, and his mother was born in what is now Tanzania (Taganyika when the British controlled it).
      But then I guess they all look alike, don't they?

  • @matthewlevy4532
    @matthewlevy4532 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I love Chris, but on this one I think he and his guest doth protest too much. She barely mentioned James Shapiro, whose book “Contested Will” lays out the evidence for the Stratford man, without any of the meanness she refers to.

  • @HkFinn83
    @HkFinn83 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The Shakespeare conspiracy is a weird one because it’s the only ‘top down’ one, that I know of. The idea being a working class lad from the Black Country couldn’t possibly be literate enough to write anything of worth, but an aristocrat could.
    Also the intro about scholars building their reputations on his identity is not true. What sort of ‘scholarship’ exactly would depend upon that, a biography perhaps? Hardly the way you’re making it out to be here.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Exactly. You get it. Shakespearian scholars study the _works_ , not the individual. This should be easy for people like Winkler because she was told directly by Marjorie Garber of Harvard University, but she can't get it because she's got the Shakespeare deniers' _idée fixe_ that biography is all-important. What's even more amusing is to hear her attribute this lack of interest in biography to Jacques Derrida, showing that she doesn't understand the difference between Derrida and F. R. Leavis. And yet these people want to pretend that they're on the cutting edge of scholarship.

  • @wuhaninstituteofvirology
    @wuhaninstituteofvirology ปีที่แล้ว +5

    watched the whole interview - missed the part where "shakespeare's a woman" (?) at the end it's hypothesized he may have been christopher marlowe (a man), or another guy (a man), but a woman? how/who

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 23 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      That's the title of Winkler's book -- forced upon her against her will by the publishers, who thought a sensationalistic title would sell better. That part really only comprises a small part of the book as a whole.

    • @wuhaninstituteofvirology
      @wuhaninstituteofvirology 12 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      @@niemann3942 (darn publishers always turning titles into misnomers for more book sales!

  • @EndoftheTownProductions
    @EndoftheTownProductions ปีที่แล้ว +22

    John Heminges, Henry Condell, and Richard Burbage, three actors of The Lord Chamberlain's Men, a famous acting company that included William Shakespeare, were given money by William Shakespeare of Stratford in his Last Will and Testament in 1616. Two of these actors, John Heminges and Henry Condell, were responsible for having 36 of Shakespeare's plays published in the First Folio in 1623. Ben Jonson's eulogy in the First Folio clearly praises Shakespeare as a great writer. He states that "thy writings to be such, /As neither Man, nor Muse, can praise too much." Heminges and Condell also praise Shakespeare as a writer, stating that "he thought, he uttered with that easinesse, that wee have scarse received from him a blot in his papers. But it is not our province, who onely gather his works, and give them you, to praise him." These are "his works" and "his papers" that they are publishing. He is clearly presented as the writer of these works in the First Folio. The Last Will and Testament of William Shakespeare of Stratford clearly connects him with the 1623 First Folio through Heminges and Condell and it is clear that Shakespeare is presented as the author of the plays.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Such ease and perfection reminds me of Mozart, genius in another realm and another era. Seems impossible that they exist, and yet they do

    • @AbbeyofTheleme
      @AbbeyofTheleme ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Well done. This interview is silly.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      There were more than just a few doubters of Shakespeare as an author among the literary luminaries of the day, if only because NONE OF THEM KNEW WHO HE WAS, AND NONE KNEW FROM WHERE HE RECEIVED HIS EDUCATION. Shakespeare was an actor and Globe Theater owner, but he wasn't a writer. No evidence of it, but plenty of reasons to doubt his authorship, EVEN IN HIS OWN TIME!!!!

    • @desperatelyseekingrealnews
      @desperatelyseekingrealnews ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mysticone1798 so?

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      *Two of these actors, John Heminges and Henry Condell, were responsible for having 36 of Shakespeare's plays published in the First Folio in 1623.*
      Okay, so ...
      How did two actors with no literary or publishing experience to speak of manage to just "have 36 of Shakespeare's plays published"? (We're also often told that they just "put together" the Folio, as if that was the easiest, most effortless thing in the world.)
      And not only that, how did those to actors manage to publish a Folio -- a lavish, luxury format that, according to the Folger Library, was reserved for the most important and prestigious of works (history, theology, etc)?
      (Heminges, by the way, was only a part-time actor, and was also a grocer, who on occasion lent some of his grocer's assistants to the theater.)
      Where did the money to print hundreds of copies of a luxury 900-page folio come from? Who were the money people backing the project?
      How did two actors manage to just walk in off the street and convince a publisher/printer to spend years working on a lavish, luxury volume of writings which, on the other hand, we are told were viewed as "trash" -- the equivalent of modern TV scripts and "pulp fiction"?
      These are logical questions that traditional scholars don't even bother to ask or attempt to answer (but which they deride other people for trying to answer).
      You are also ignoring the fact that the mentions of those actors in the will were interlineated afterthoughts.
      Also, that, unlike Shakespeare scholars who have to take Ben Jonson at face value -- "as if he were George Washington," as Winkler puts it -- Jonson scholars understand that Ben Jonson was the LAST person who could be taken at face value; that he was a master of walking the line of ambiguity and seeming to say one thing, while actually saying the opposite.
      Also, that Ben Jonson scholars have pretty well shown that all the introductory material in the Folio was written by Ben Jonson -- including "Heminges and Condell's letters." (Unless, that is, those two actors -- one a grocer -- also just happened to typically write using reams of classical allusions which just happened to parallel those found in the works of Ben Jonson.) If it is indeed the case that Jonson wrote the letter credited to others, then the First Folio is a lie and nothing in it can be trusted.

  • @IamBoaz
    @IamBoaz ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'll save you a half an hour.
    ...
    No.

  • @bigears5809
    @bigears5809 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    No he wasn't. Silly.

  • @Stellarcrete
    @Stellarcrete ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I am a veteran. I am a chemical engineer. I am a student. I am a doctor. I am a surgeon. I am a poet. You don't know me. My work isn't in your records. My children were taught to fend for themselves and be happy. They weren't taught to be like me on the outside. They were taught to be like me on the inside. You can't know me from my resume and you can't know me from my children. My wife is Chinese. I am not. I am not indifferent. I don't revere the mystery. I don't exclude the author. Hamlet was the only good one. The rest were derivative. It could be one man was so busy writing plays and suing for $200 that he ignored his daughters or maybe he taught them to be smart and their mark was more than a mere mark. It could be that he wrote one good one and then phoned in the rest and lived the life of LBJ in his garden after building the great society. It could be that he was a petty business man and he collected a bunch of plays, but then why didn't he put them in his will, because a business man would, wouldn't he? It could be he was a con-artist, but then wouldn't he be MORE certain to put them in his will and fight over them in court and flaunt witnesses that he was the author? I wrote my first poem in 6th grade after barely learning grammar. He clearly picked some stuff up as an actor that he hadn't learned from a prairie box with desks in it. If there was a superhuman peering prophet that could have done it, wouldn't he just be a man with 2 daughters and a catholic wife? Clearly the person that wrote Hamlet wasn't a showoff. Of course I want to know who wrote them. I want to know who wrote each word, but you haven't given me a solution and all your propositions have at least as many questions as the humble recluse businessman. I like the brunette, the video, the channel, the book and the question, but I don't know and so I default to yea it was just some guy.

  • @daveconstable6096
    @daveconstable6096 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I’ reading Shakespeare’s works the past while. I have the Norton door stopper of a collection.
    What I’ve noticed is that a lot of the writing is good enough to be Irish.

    • @horaceosirian8993
      @horaceosirian8993 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It's not inconceivable that he author was an invisible, six foot two and a half Pookah called Harvey.

  • @allanc2827
    @allanc2827 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Ironically, many people believe someone could not have written the plays without a classic education, which is the height of elitism, especially British elitism.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That is because there is so much classical learning on display in the works that even traditional scholars have to simultaneously claim that, on the one hand, Shakespeare didn't know much Greek or Latin ... and on the other that Elizabethan grammar schools provided the equivalent of a modern graduate degree in the classics from an Ivy League university. Yes, really.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@niemann3942 Please be specific about the degree of "classical learning" on display in the works and make sure that you're citing only those parts that Shakespeare actually wrote and which weren't written by his collaborators. For example, I'm fully willing to admit that the passage in _1 Henry VI_ , Act I, sc. 6 where Charles says:
      'Tis Joan, not we, by whom the day is won;
      For which I will divide my crown with her,
      And all the priests and friars in my realm
      Shall in procession sing her endless praise.
      A statelier pyramis to her I'll rear
      Than Rhodope's or Memphis' ever was:
      In memory of her when she is dead,
      Her ashes, in an urn more precious
      Than the rich-jewel'd of Darius,
      Transported shall be at high festivals
      Before the kings and queens of France.
      ...does show an uncommon amount of classical learning. However, _1 Henry VI_ is one of the plays that Shakespeare barely wrote, with stylometry only crediting him with the rose-picking scene in the Temple garden in act II and the Talbot scenes of act IV. This example of excessive name-dropping was probably written by the University Wit, Thomas Nashe.

  • @singingway
    @singingway 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    P.G. Wodehouse has a charcter who talks the ears off Bertie Wooster about Bacon or Marlowe.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He also wrote "The Reverent Wooing of Archibald", one of the Mr. Mulliner stories collected in _Mr. Mulliner Speaking_ , where he parodied the Baconian cipher-hunters mercilessly.
      Archibald had long since come to a definite decision that what this woman needed was a fluid ounce of weed-killer, scientifically administered. With a good deal of adroitness he contrived to head her off from her favourite topic during the meal: but after the coffee had been disposed of she threw off all restraint. Scooping him up and bearing him off into the recesses of the west wing, she wedged him into a corner of a settee and began to tell him all about the remarkable discovery which had been made by applying the Plain Cipher to Milton’s well-known Epitaph on Shakespeare.
      "The one beginning ‛ What needs my Shakespeare for his honoured bones? ’ " said the aunt.
      "Oh, that one?” said Archibald.
      "‘What needs my Shakespeare for his honoured bones? The labour of an Age in piled stones? Or that his hallowed Reliques should be hid under a star y-pointing Pyramid?’” said the aunt.
      Archibald, who was not good at riddles, said he didn’t know.
      “As in the Plays and Sonnets,” said the aunt, "we substitute the name equivalents of the figure totals.”
      "We do what?”
      "Substitute the name equivalents of the figure totals.”
      "The which?”
      "The figure totals.”
      "All right,” said Archibald. "Let it go. I daresay you know best.”
      The aunt inflated her lungs.
      "These figure totals,” she said, " are always taken out in the Plain Cipher, A equalling one to Z equals twenty-four. The names are counted in the same way. A capital letter with the figures indicates an occasional variation in the Name Count. For instance, A equals twenty-seven, B twenty-eight, until K equals ten is reached, when K, instead of ten, becomes one, and T instead of nineteen, is one, and R or Reverse, and so on, until A equals twenty-four is reached. The short or single Digit is not used here. Reading the Epitaph in the light of this Cipher, it becomes: ‘What need Verulam for Shakespeare? Francis Bacon England's King be hid under a W. Shakespeare? William Shakespeare. Fame, what needst Francis Tudor, King of England? Francis. Francis W. Shakespeare. For Francis thy William Shakespeare hath England’s King took W. Shakespeare. Then thou our W. Shakespeare Francis Tudor bereaving Francis Bacon Francis Tudor such a tomb William Shakespeare.' "
      The speech to which he had been listening was unusually lucid and simple for a Baconian, yet Archibald, his eye catching a battle-axe that hung on the wall, could not but stifle a wistful sigh. How simple it would have been, had he not been a Mulliner and a gentleman, to remove the weapon from its hook, spit on his hands, and haul off and dot this doddering old ruin one just above the imitation pearl necklace. Placing his twitching hands underneath him and sitting on them, he stayed where he was, until just as the clock on the mantelpiece chimed the hour of midnight, a merciful fit of hiccoughs on the part of his hostess enabled him to retire.

  • @joekulik999
    @joekulik999 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    02:37 - Sorry, Chris, but this topic is just Bull $hit to me. I've read all about it and the argument that Shakespeare didn't write his plays is NOT based on Evidence, but on the Lack Of Evidence. Just because he didn't have the backgtound of someone who had such literary skill means NOTHING because it discounts Shakespeare being a bona fide Genius. Only Small People who are jealous of Shakespeare's writing abilities doubt that he wrote all those sonnets and plays.

  • @JCMcGee
    @JCMcGee ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Well....that was 20 min of absolutely nothing.

  • @MG-ye1hu
    @MG-ye1hu 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm a sceptic myself and this interview sums up the crucial points of this position very well. And, as mentioned in the interview, I'm quite sure that there are also many sceptics among scholars who keep it to themselves, for obvious reasons.
    However, I somehow grew tired of this debate already some time ago. Unfortunately, it has more and more become a playground for conspiracy fans than of literary debate.
    I don't believe in the Marlowe theory, not because of the necessary conspiracy you need to suppose, but because their works (despite some obvious influences) show such different artistic features that this seems very unlikely to me.
    And I can appreciate the position of Marjorie Garber that you can find everything about Shakespeare in his works, and that the authorship debate is rather unfruitful and distracting.
    In fact, it was "Will in the world" by Stephen Greenblatt (whom I admire very much) that propelled my scepticism, exactly in its desperate attempt to find connections between life and works that rather devaluated the works than enlightened them.
    Unless a smoking gun surfaces which will solve the issue, I rather stay away from this debate.

  • @christophermorgan3261
    @christophermorgan3261 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    That Shakespeare was the not the author of the plays is the mother of all conspiracy theories and these two hack journalists are an embarrassment. Shakespeare was hailed by his contemporaries like Ben Johnson as the author.

    • @brianbutler3318
      @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Anybody who is widely read in British literature or history will be appalled at this uniformed garbage discussion

    • @MIKEMIKE-te2dt
      @MIKEMIKE-te2dt 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Billy Shears would laugh in your face. He's been masquerading as Paul McCartney for over fifty years!

  • @bobhope5114
    @bobhope5114 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wow what a hard hitting piece...so relevant (sarc)

  • @biff408
    @biff408 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Frankly, the doubts about Shakespeare are overblown. There are numerous references to his native Warwickshire throughout his plays. This is just a nonsense.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      And yet, we're also told that "he was the most anonymous of writers" and that he "left no trace of himself in his works." We are told that we are NOT to look for autobiographical elements in the plays.
      So which is it? Is it okay to look for autobiographical elements or not? Because if it is, then we can go into whole areas that don't at all seem to reflect the Stratfordian's life. For example, there are also numerous references to Italy and Italian cities and regions in the plays -- more so than to Warwickshire -- so detailed that actual Italians and Italian scholars marvel at their accuracy. So might those reflect the author too?

    • @biff408
      @biff408 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@niemann3942 possibly, he was also an acclaimed actor so it's possible he interacted with actors from other countries and gleaned a lot of information for his plays. It is an open question as verifiable data on Shakespeare is thin on the ground. Even the correct spelling of his name is hotly debated.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@biff408 But even there, no, he was not an acclaimed actor. So much of what people think "we know about Shakespeare" is a mythological character untethered from actual records. Even traditional scholars say he was at most a mid-level actor, doing smaller character parts. There is little documentation of any parts he may have played. And he seems not to have been acclaimed at all. When he died no one took any notice or seemed to think he was anything special. From all his supposed writer pals ... crickets.
      That is the problem, which once again leads to traditionalists having to constantly flip-flop and claim polar opposite things.
      ("The works show signs of his life!" "The works are imaginative and don't show signs of anyone's life!" "The works aren't autobiographical!" "But we get to see autobiography in them!")
      In 2016, during the anniversary tributes of his death, within the same week I heard respected Shakespeare scholars claim both that "he was the most celebrated writer of his time, hobnobbing with the most powerful people of the age" ... AND ... "he died a nobody and only became famous by accident after his death." It's another case of "So which is it? Obviously both those things cannot be true at the same time." Yes, experts can disagree, but when they can't agree on whether someone was a "nobody" or the most celebrated of the age and hanging around with royalty, that indicates a problem.
      The problem is, Shakespeare-the-Writer was obviously respected, admired, and acclaimed. Meanwhile, Shakspere-the-Stratfordian seems not to have been. Trying to make one fit the other is like trying to force oil to mix with water.

    • @biff408
      @biff408 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@niemann3942 I don't agree with your assertions. There are plenty of references that can be quoted to support my view. The issue is what scholars, especially Historians call "the agreed upon facts" Shakespeare and other historical figures have conflicting data points that probably will not be settled in this life unless time travel becomes a possibility ( I doubt it ever will)

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@biff408 Again, when scholars can't agree on something as basic as whether their subject was a nobody who only became famous by accident after his death, or was the most acclaimed writer of the time, associating with the most famous, powerful people -- that indicates a problem.
      Samuel Schoenbaum, the great documenter of Shakspere's life, was at least honest and said he couldn't reconcile the "vertigenous [vertigo-inducing] gap" between the records of the Stratfordian's life and the works. (So then he just went to the usual non-explanation "out" of just chalking it up to the incomprehensible mysteries of "genius.")
      Again, we're not trying to convince anyone of any one candidate; just asking that, given such bizarre inconsistencies, it be granted that there is room for reasonable doubt and more research into the question. But, again, some go ballistic at the very thought and refuse to allow even the slightest hint of doubt.

  • @EchoBravo370
    @EchoBravo370 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Good god, these questions have been swirling forever. This is not new conjecture. If naysayers can prove someone else wrote the plays, then bring it. If they can't, don't whine when others don't care about your questions.

  • @NewOrleansSeptember
    @NewOrleansSeptember ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Here you have a woman trying to make a name for herself. Anything can be argued as you can see by the various speculations in this video. Shakespeare's works show the commonality and singularity that only one writer could produce. So Shakespeare was well read beyond his actual specifically known education. Genius in a person in not something visible to others except in the case of Shakespeare in his works. There is nothing to suggest that anyone but William Shakespeare wrote his plays. Nothing, except speculative arguments for people to try to sell their own writings.
    The idea that centuries later you will discover something very different about a man who lived in the 17rh century is itself an absurdity.

    • @NewOrleansSeptember
      @NewOrleansSeptember ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@TheKeendark I said why i thought what she was promoting was nonsense very specifically. Try taking a reading and comprehension class.

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Read the book.

    • @bonniebluebell5940
      @bonniebluebell5940 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Agreed. I was going to sum it up here in my own simple countrified fashion... GENIUS.

  • @albertfinster4093
    @albertfinster4093 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Yes, saying that Shakespeare was the author of his plays and poems was a huge conspiracy. But why this fraud was perpetrated is never explained. Shakespeare in his own day was not a revered figure. Surely there was no real reason why a true author would be so frightened to be known as a brilliant writer. Shakespeare was more of a businessman interested in the money he earned than the works he produced. So are many artistic people. Shakespeare's folio was published by members of his acting troop, who would have known whether Shakespeare wrote his works. None of these people even hinted that anyone else wrote these works. No one who knew any of the other figures purported in any way to have known these people as the author of these works.
    These works were massive. They are the works of a lifetime. All of the people who are mentioned had vast accomplishments in their lives. When did they have the time to write all of these plays and poems? How was it that none of them was ever found out, given the fact that these works in progress would have lying around? Which author would have been so reluctant to be praised for creating such masterpieces? Why and how was this conspiracy carried out? This is usually never explained by the doubters. They pick the usual suspects, explain their reasons for believing in them, but do not provide one piece of evidence regarding how they produced these vast works, how they covered up their authorship, why they covered up this authorship, or why no one in Shakespeare's ever caught on to this conspiracy, which must have lasted for years.
    If you want to blow the lid on this fraud, I want proof. Give me the name of the real author, let me know when and how he or she wrote these works, why they covered up their own glory, and provide some real proof, not merely speculation. Their is a saying, "Extraordinary theories demand extraordinary proof." Give me that proof, and I will agree to your supposition. Without that proof I say that old Will is still the guy.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว

      Google Marlovian Theory. There are plenty of reasons the author would have wanted to conceal his identity, not the least of which was his indirect criticism of the Queen of England and her government.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      *But why this fraud was perpetrated is never explained.*
      It's been explained repeatedly for years. It's explained in the very book this video is about.
      *Shakespeare in his own day was not a revered figure.*
      That's odd. In other comments in this very thread he is being described as "famous" and "acclaimed". He is regularly described as "the most celebrated writer of his time" and "hobnobbing with the most powerful people of his age." Until it's suddenly necessary for him not to be, that is.
      *Shakespeare's folio was published by members of his acting troop*
      Again, the regular claim which is *really* never explained: Actors weren't publishers. Theater companies didn't own printing shops. So how did a couple of actors with zero publishing and literary experience manage to just "put together" (the usual phrase) a huge, 900-page luxury volume that took years to complete, taking up hundreds of hours of time and labor in two different printing shops, which ended up costing the modern equivalent of about $275?
      And where did the money for all that work, and all those materials, come from?
      These are logical questions, but no one ever says anything beyond, "The First Folio was put together by Heminges and Condell" -- making it all seem like an easy, effortless piece of cake.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Typical establishment Shakespearean dolt wants PROOF of alternative authorship!
      Obviously, there are many obstacles to absolute proof, not the least being that THE REAL AUTHOR DIDN'T WANT TO BE KNOWN!!! DUH!!! The authorship of the works was being questioned IN SHAKESPEARE'S TIME and at all times thereafter. Why??? Because the REAL writers of the time KNEW that a person such as S. the actor COULD NOT HAVE WRITTEN the works! They joked and poked fun at the idea of S. as the author, and it seems it was an endless source of amusement for them.
      You can say that old Will is "still" the author, but that doesn't make it the truth. The fact that S. authorship has been questioned for centuries, for many good reasons, is evidence enough that S. CANNOT BE PROVEN TO BE THE AUTHOR EITHER. You're back at square one with the rest of us for the foreseeable future.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@niemann3942 The standard theory of S. authorship has no more proof to boast of than the theories of alternative authorship. The fact that, after all these years, the authorship of the S. works is STILL BEING QUESTIONED seems evidence enough that S. will NEVER BE PROVEN to be the author either.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mysticone1798 So you think that because you merely postulate a scenario of hidden authorship that therefore it must automatically be accepted?
      And the reason that people still question Shakespeare's authorship is not because of a lack of evidence, but because they _disregard_ the evidence that exists as their starting step. And once you do that, you can never be convinced of anything. They have to ignore all the title page attributions, all the Stationers' Register entries that record the author, the Master of the Revels' Accounts, and every single contemporary testimony from everyone who bothered to speak on the subject, many of whom knew Shakespeare personally and/or professionally or clearly knew a great deal about him and his antecedents.

  • @singingway
    @singingway 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    What? Chris, you never asked about the title of her book, and her reason for asserting that Shakespeare could have been a woman! (Although it's hard to believe a woman could have written The misogynistic taming of the shrew. Perhaps as satire.)

  • @othmanmajid6380
    @othmanmajid6380 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hahaha❤😂😂😂😂It's like some of the Chinese period (no pun intended) dramas where the General finds himself helplessly falling in love with one of his body guards only to find out just in time he's a she ❤❤❤😊😊

  • @desperatelyseekingrealnews
    @desperatelyseekingrealnews ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Waddafuq , I ain't even gonna waste my time watching this "report" ,who cares ? What is this obsession with pulling apart every important figure from our past, ?

  • @brianbutler3318
    @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Just because you know a lot about politics doesn’t mean you know even the first principles of historical scholarship, evidently. I can’t believe Chris Hedges teaches at Princeton and also would put out this video. There are historians and literary scholars at Princeton, maybe Chris should show this video to them and get their opinion. Maybe then he would remove the video and apologize to all the offended and annoyed experts in the field.

  • @patrickholt2270
    @patrickholt2270 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The idolatry begins within Shakespeare's work, in that in Romeo and Juliet he makes an idolatry of romance in the words of Romeo and Juliet to each other. That in itself is very seductive to actors and audiences, to then transpose that misplaced veneration onto Shakespeare as the author of that emotional experience for them, and as the Prophet of the false god which that play preaches. The other thing is the appropriation of Shakespeare as a class signifier by the English upper class. It is the English public schools most of all which teach Shakespeare, and teach the familiarity with archaic English and Greek and Latin with which to more readily understand Shakespeare, whose work is full of references to Classical literature and mythology. Besides that, the English theatres are mostly patronised and staffed by members of the English upper classes. Actors are prone to a pseudo-messianic collective self-regard, and to regard their profession as a calling and a sacred mission that enobles and enlightens humanity, and the veneration of Shakespeare, as both the Ur-playright and almost founder of the English theatre tradition, fits in very well as an expression and justification of that collective self-regard, which is also an expression of class conceit.
    In terms of Shakespeare's failure to educate his daughters, that could just be him being a bad father. Because a man can write seductive and creative love poems and romantic plays doesn't prevent him being a narcisist personally, and deficient as a father and spouse. Having too much "game" as people call it these days, and spending his adult life working with actors and actresses (if that's right) who are unusually physically attractive by self-selection and by casting, might well give rise to neglect of filial piety, or being a cad, to put it another way. People being inconsistent and contradictory, hypocrites even, is very commonplace, if not the norm.

  • @gregoryallen0001
    @gregoryallen0001 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    tbh no offense but i always think this about "historical" jesus christ.. like.. that tale needs a reality check there is no evidence 🧘🏻‍♀️

  • @bugsby4663
    @bugsby4663 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is because they cannot fathom a lower middle class lad being a genius. Only an aristocrat can write such verse. It's just snobbery.

  • @jonathanjackson6161
    @jonathanjackson6161 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    it's Elizabeth Winkler who wears blinkers not Professor Wells or other scholars who focus on the grainy data in Shakespeare's text, and shy away from murky guesses about authorship. If more is known about the education of Ben Jonson and Marlowe because they went to Oxbridge, that doesn't mean that only a formally educated could have written such plays. Clever people soak up the knowledge around them with almost mysterious facility and knowledge was vibrant in Shakespeare's world; the English language held power then that we can only gawk at today. No, like his father, Shakespeare was a master craftsman of the theatre who used the tools of his trade to express the genius of his age.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Just a correction: Ben Jonson didn't go to Oxbridge. In fact, in terms of formal education his situation is on a par with Shakespeare's: we _infer_ that he went to a grammar school, but we can't, strictly speaking, prove it. We think he went to the Westminster School, but it's not because his name is on any class rolls. It's just that he referred to "his master Camden" in private conversation with William Drummond of Hawthornden (and, incidentally, referred to Shakespeare as an author in the same bunch of chats) and dedicated a poem to him. William Camden was headmaster of Westminster School when Ben Jonson would have been attending.
      Instead, Ben Jonson became the most erudite writer of his age by self-education as an adult, which is the very thing that the authorship deniers imply that Shakespeare was unable to do.
      The reason that Ben Jonson is better-attested than Shakespeare is that he lived 20 years longer, didn't retire to the country but died in London, and was so thoroughly associated with the royal court. Indeed, for ten years between 1616's _The Devil is an Ass_ and 1626's _The Staple of News_ , he wrote _no_ plays for the public theatres and just wrote verses and masques for court performances. Shakespeare was also, to an extent, associated with the court as a member of the King's Men and the Groom of the Chamber, but he didn't pen works for the court; he just wrote and acted in public theatre plays that the king then brought in to have staged for holiday festivities (especially Christmastide). Plus, of course, Ben Jonson was a relentless self-promoter.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      An author of the Shakespearean works having had no formal literary education is about as likely as a janitor who can't do math coming up with Einstein's Theory of Relativity. It's just not plausible, given the level of creativity and the amazing productivity. It seems likely that many of the plays had been written long before they were introduced as Shakespeare's works in the theater.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@@mysticone1798 He did have a formal literary education... in grammar school. He was thoroughly grounded in the Renaissance humanist curriculum of the day based on close study of the Latin writers as advocated by Erasmus, Melancthon, della Mirandola, and Ficino. John Bretchgirdle, the Stratford-upon-Avon vicar, was a former Oxford don and also a schoolmaster at Witton in Cheshire, and his grammar school curriculum included Erasmus, Ovid's _Metamorphoses_ , Terence, Mantuan, Tully [Cicero]. Sallust, Virgil, Horace, "and such others as shall be thought convenient". Bretchgirdle's protégé at Oxford was John Brownswerd (or Brownsword), who was the man he hired as schoolmaster and was teaching there when Shakespeare would have begun his studies. Brownswerd, in addition to being an Oxford grad, was also a Latin poet of such repute that he is praised in Francis Meres' _Palladis Tamia_ .
      If an early modern student got a formal education in literature, it was given to them at the grammar school level. The Oxbridge universities were essentially still vocational schools for training priests. They didn't have MFA creative writing programs and literature degrees.

    • @castlerock58
      @castlerock58 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mysticone1798
      It is as likely as an Indian clerk who was educated at the local school being one of the greatest mathematicians of all time or a boy who was born in a log cabin becoming president of the US and writing some of the greatest speeches in English or any other language with no formal literary education. Lincoln read books. That is all Shakespeare needed to have done. If you have one of the greatest minds in history who leans to read in a local grammar school all that he needed to do was get involved in theater and writing plays and having access to the books he needed. He might have a mind that is one in 500 million. People like that don't need much formal education. They teach themselves from books, thinking and observing nature and human behavior.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Nullifidian It's no wonder that theories about alternative Shakespeare authorships are so common and so believable, given the pathetically weak arguments on the other side, like yours!! Grammar school for youth is insufficient for such sophisticated writing as the Bard's. Also, writers were being educated and trained at universities like Oxford and Cambridge as far back as the 1500's, so your claim there is a false one. It's obvious to all, especially Sh. contemporaries, that the man named Shakespeare was NOT the author of the works. Many suspected it way back then, for many reasons, and many more suspect it today. There is NO real evidence that Shakespeare was the author, which in itself is the biggest clue that he wasn't!!!

  • @barbaramorse5963
    @barbaramorse5963 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Can u please cover Marianne Williamson. There is a blackout of all other candidates but biden..

  • @terryrobinson2324
    @terryrobinson2324 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    People were much deeper thinkers in the past. A lifetime of being in conversation with brilliant people could have been an education to die for a poor peasant. Believe it r not most brilliant people have not been "properly" educated. I do not really care one way or another but it does smack of an snobbery that has been adopted by the consumer stamped approved educated..which plays it's hand in other areas.

  • @PedroDiMaggio-dk4lb
    @PedroDiMaggio-dk4lb ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is probably the most ridiculous Hedges Report I have ever seen.

  • @stevosd60
    @stevosd60 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    What a load of overintellectualised tosh .
    Will was an actor. He is documented this contemporaries. Theater In Elizabethan times was a lowly profession.
    It is a strange concept that you can't be great naturally...
    How could a working class boy from a council house with no writing or music education have written Yesterday and The long and winding road and countless others. It must have been someone else 🤔

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It is extensively documented how. And all he wrote is completely congruent with his documented life, education level, and background -- having an amateur musician dad who played old standard Music Hall and 20's, 30's, and 40's songs on the piano ... having a "Mother Mary" who died young ... loving Buddy Holly, Elvis, and Little Richard ... living near Penny Lane ... loving Spike Milligan and the Goon Show, which was a huge influence on what is now thought of as "Beatle" humor ... moving to "swinging London" which exposed him to many other creative influences ... working closely with classically trained musicians like George Martin (who taught him about writing for string quartet, as on "Yesterday") ... etc.

    • @stevosd60
      @stevosd60 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@niemann3942 You mean Paul didn't go to the royal collage of music? Well what do you know.

  • @tigran56
    @tigran56 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Such a ridiculous argument. Not an actors perspective. Who created the Boxer at Rest? George Orwell didn’t go to University. Neither did Socrates. Chaucer? No. He aint like you. Get over it. Shakespeare could have been anyone, as an actor in his plays it makes zero difference to me, Rylance, in that sense, was rare. I dont study John Osborne or Tennessee Williams, and they were famously autobiographical. It actually hampers the imagination, as you say, not your concern, nor, dears, your strength. The discussion smacks of academic angst and desire to claim an undeniable genius as one of your own. It is sad.

  • @uttaradit2
    @uttaradit2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    wokespeare

  • @macawism
    @macawism ปีที่แล้ว +1

    What is the point of this dated reiteration of speculative verbiage that some loquacious people use to scratch a few dollars

  • @leighfoulkes7297
    @leighfoulkes7297 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This is this just elite Englishmen getting upset that a man from the lower classes could write better than any of them? It does make sense that guy got obsessed with plays, memorized them inside and out, learned how to write and then through obsession and then become the greatest writer of plays.

  • @missricka6801
    @missricka6801 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    I for one found this a welcome break from current political discussions. One sub theme I found of particular interest is the politics in the rarified world of upper academia of which I only had a glimpse into from the perspective of a woman friend who was in her own right a world renown researcher in the field of genetics.

    • @marcyfan-tz4wj
      @marcyfan-tz4wj ปีที่แล้ว +2

      a welcome break indeed even if shakespeare's identity seems as unsolvable as who shot jfk with at least 317 more years involved in the cover-up. i admire chris and his guest and listened intently.

    • @mitchyoung93
      @mitchyoung93 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Shakespeare shot JFK

    • @albertfinster4093
      @albertfinster4093 ปีที่แล้ว

      No he didn't. It was Bacon 9or another ham).@@mitchyoung93

    • @allanc2827
      @allanc2827 ปีที่แล้ว

      'World renowned' does not necessarily mean smart or correct.

    • @marcyfan-tz4wj
      @marcyfan-tz4wj ปีที่แล้ว

      i had to look and see if i dragged out the words "world renowned" but i didn't. being world renowned about something completely unknowable 400 years later isn't much to boast about but i enjoyed what she said never-the-less.@@allanc2827

  • @Govstuff137
    @Govstuff137 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Who the F should care? The person wrote good stuff. Nothing to debate.

  • @chriscollins1525
    @chriscollins1525 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    We don’t know Homer’s id. It’s doesn’t mean we can’t appreciate and dig into the text.

  • @allanc2827
    @allanc2827 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    William Shakespeare didn't write the plays. Someone else named William Shakespeare wrote them.

  • @AdamGeest
    @AdamGeest ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Questioning Shakespeare’s authorship is hardly a taboo topic in the Academy. So consistently has this issue been raised in the past that scholars have dignified it with its own peculiar and cumbersome designation, namely, antistratfordianism.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +3

      They don't really mean "taboo"; what they mean is that they want it taught in academia as a legitimate topic without having to go through the rigorous scholarly work to demonstrate its legitimacy. Scholars popping up from time to time to deliver a well-deserved smack-down to their specious and evidence-free arguments isn't the kind of attention they want. They might as well expect biology departments to offer courses on so-called "creation science" or "intelligent design", and creationists also make the equivalent claim about how they're shut out by an unfriendly and "atheistic" orthodoxy.

    • @horaceosirian8993
      @horaceosirian8993 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That the mere question is taboo is self-evident in the 'anti' part of antistratfordian; genuine inquiry / truth-seeking doesn't imply opposition.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@horaceosirian8993 Then take it up with the Shakespeare-deniers, because they're the ones who came up with the "anti-Stratfordian" term in the first place. The first reference I can find to "anti-Stratfordian" comes from a Shakespeare-denier named Appleton Morgan writing in what is evidently his own journal, _Appleton's Journal_ , in 1880.
      In any case, genuine inquiry and truth-seeking are not high on the Shakespeare-deniers' agenda, in my experience.

  • @YouDoTheShoot
    @YouDoTheShoot ปีที่แล้ว +22

    There is a considerable amount of evidence indicating that the plays and poems attributed to William Shakespeare were indeed written by him:
    1. **Contemporary References:** Several of Shakespeare's contemporaries mention him as a writer. For instance, Robert Greene, a writer and Shakespeare's contemporary, refers to him in a pamphlet as an "upstart crow" who is "beautified with our feathers," implying that Shakespeare was already gaining recognition as a successful writer in his own time. Other contemporaries, such as Richard Barnfield and John Weever, praised his work in their writings.
    2. **The First Folio (1623):** This is perhaps the most significant piece of evidence. The First Folio is the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s plays, published seven years after his death by his friends and fellow actors, John Heminges and Henry Condell. It contains 36 plays, 18 of which had never been printed before. The preface refers to Shakespeare as the author, and the book includes personal tributes by Ben Jonson and other contemporaries.
    3. **Shakespeare's Acting Career:** Records from the period show that a William Shakespeare was a member of the Lord Chamberlain's Men (later the King's Men), an acting company that performed many of the plays now attributed to him. It seems highly unlikely that the company would perform a vast number of plays from an unknown author while publicly attributing them to one of their actors.
    4. **Stationers' Register:** The Stationers' Register, a record of books registered for publication in England, lists many of Shakespeare's plays and poems under his name.
    5. **Legal Documents:** There are numerous legal documents from the time, including property purchases, that refer to Shakespeare as a writer.
    The scholarly consensus overwhelmingly supports Shakespeare's authorship. and to suggest there is no evidence to support the claim and that somehow Shakespear was randomly picked out of thin air is ridiculous. I appreciate the nuance of your effort, of which there is none. How did he do what he did ... maybe he was a savant.

    • @brianbutler3318
      @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Thank you Mr. youdotheshoot! This comment section has been drowning in ignorance.

    • @brianbutler3318
      @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sultanwhomever4911 I hope Chris Hedges reads this and responds to us in some way-I can’t believe he would leave these irrefutable arguments to whistle in the wind while his reputation suffers

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว

      The author was surely NOT A WOMAN, but it's equally implausible that Shakespeare was! There is NOT very much evidence at all that this actor was the author of the Shakespearean works, but PLENTY OF EVIDENCE that he wasn't. Prior to the earliest plays being introduced, THERE WAS NO MENTION OF SHAKESPEARE by his contemporaries, since none of them had heard of him, or knew in the least who he was!!! Compare this actual fact with Point 1 above by this poster, and you will have a very good idea of how Shakespeare apologists approach the issue. That is, with misinformation, omissions, and lies.
      Female authorship is out of the question, since there were no female authors known who might have had the talent, though there were indeed several male candidates. Find out more: Google "Marlovian Theory", "Shakespeare Authorship", etc.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@mysticone1798 "Prior to the earliest plays being introduced, THERE WAS NO MENTION OF SHAKESPEARE by his contemporaries, since none of them had heard of him, or knew in the least who he was!!!"
      The earliest plays by Shakespeare were all anonymously published up until 1598, when the first quarto of _Love's Labour's Lost_ and the second quartos of _Richard III_ and _Richard II_ were published with his name on them. So are you saying that there were no contemporaries who mentioned Shakespeare before 1598? If so, you're wrong.
      The earliest identifiable reference to Shakespeare is in Robert Greene's _A Groatsworth of Wit Bought with a Million of Repentance_ , where Greene warns three of his playwriting colleagues, identified as Christopher Marlowe, George Peele, and Thomas Nashe, against continuing to write for actors, because the ungrateful actors have turned to playwriting themselves. He abuses a certain "Shake-scene" with a sly reference to his popular play that we now call _Henry VI, Part 3_ by saying "with his tiger's heart in his player's hide". He also calls him "an absolute Johannes fac totum [Jack of all trades]" and because of Shake-scene and other actor-playwrights like him advises his friends to abandon writing for the theatres and take up penning works for aristocratic masters. The theatres were closed by June 1592 due to an initial period of unrest and kept closed by plague, so the last time Greene had a chance to hear this line given was the beginning of summer at the latest. Which places the composition of the play in 1590-1591, _maybe_ early 1592 at the uttermost.
      Shakespeare is then identified as the author of _Venus and Adonis_ (1593) and _The Rape of Lucrece (1594), and _Venus and Adonis_ proves very popular, going into three more editions in the next three years (Q4 by 1596). _Lucrece_ is somewhat less popular, and gets a reprint in 1598.
      Also in 1594, his name is mentioned in the prefatory poem to Henry Willobie's _Willobie His Avisa_ in 1595 in a printed marginal note ("Sweet Shakespeare") to William Covell's _Polimanteia_ , and then in 1598 we have Shakespeare named as the author of _Venus and Adonis_ , _Lucrece_ , his "sugred sonnets among his private friends", and thirteen named plays in _Palladis Tamia_ by Francis Meres. Although this is the same year as Shakespeare's first credited plays, Meres' list includes works that were never credited to Shakespeare before (remember Shakespeare's name only appeared on three plays in '98), and some of them would remain unpublished and uncredited until the publication of the First Folio like _The Two Gentlemen of Verona_ . Also, you couldn't just hit Ctrl-P to print.in this era. A book the size of Meres' had to be in the hands of the printer for at least several months or even a year or more because all the type was individually set by hand. Also in 1598 was Richard Barnfield's "Remembrance of Some English Poets" in _The Encomium of Lady Pecunia_ . And although 1598 is perhaps too early, this is also the earliest possible date that Gabriel Harvey could have written his marginal note to himself recording the popularity of _Venus and Adonis_ among "the younger sort", but saying that _Lucrece_ and _Hamlet_ "have it in them to please the wiser sort". The book he left his marginal note in, Thomas Speght's edition of Chaucer, was published in 1598. It's an outside date and I just mention it for completeness.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Nullifidian I'm aware of the earliest plays NOT bearing the name of Shakespeare, but that this name was used some time later. That is exactly what I meant when I said his contemporaries had never heard of him, which they certainly HAD NOT when his name was first being used to designate authorship. The fact that NO NAME WAS INITIALLY ASSIGNED to the author is clearly A MUCH BETTER ARGUMENT IN SUPPORT OF ALTERNATIVE AUTHORSHIP than it is in support of standard theory!!!
      The REAL writers of the time often JOKED ABOUT SHAKESPEARE, and wrote many jests and veiled remarks about their doubts regarding authorship. The quote you provide in your history lesson about actors now writing their own plays is doubtless one of the jests of this sort where we can easily read between the lines. Shakespeare's contemporaries KNEW that no such actor could be writing the plays, and they wondered (as did many others) who the real author might be. It has become known to millions that Shakespeare was NOT the author, and the fact that the REAL author remains unknown relates to the rather obvious fact that HE WISHED TO REMAIN ANNONYMOUS.

  • @d.thorpe2046
    @d.thorpe2046 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I though it was an interesting conversation. Thank you.

  • @jeffreyohler2599
    @jeffreyohler2599 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    22:52 What's that say about 'State of Mind'? Keeping in mind that Knighthood is akin to receiving a Presidential Medal in the US. It's amongst the highest honors a civilian can be bestowed with. Although the medal is just a show piece where as Knighthood actually comes with treatments & accessibilities normal folks don't get.
    Yet to be bestowed with Knighthood for being Knowledgeable of another Human Being? Seems kind of odd to me. Much to her point,how can this be if people don't even know for sure if it was a He or a She? Seems to me this would be base level Knowledge any 'Knighthood' candidate should know doesn't it?

  • @jackdolphy8965
    @jackdolphy8965 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Geeepers why cut the interview off like that. It was rolling along just fine and the interviewee seemed aok about continuing….. I’ll have to get her book.

  • @waltermalcom3894
    @waltermalcom3894 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Read the book

  • @theJDfromCA
    @theJDfromCA ปีที่แล้ว +21

    This theory was first espoused by Delia Bacon. "She hated William Shakespeare so passionately she lost her mind and her health trying to prove he didn’t write those plays. She dismissed him as a vulgar, illiterate deer poacher and “Lord Leicester’s stable boy.” She preferred to believe Francis Bacon authored the plays - and that she was related to Bacon (she wasn’t)." And to this day the tired old madness drolls on.

    • @avlasting3507
      @avlasting3507 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Interesting. It's called legitimate inquiry however.

    • @TheJazzper1970
      @TheJazzper1970 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Delia Bacon was wrong but much of your post contains inaccuracies or half truths about her. No evidence her later madness had anything to do with her passionately hating William Shakespeare or her work. As far as I know for most of her life she didn't claim to be related to Francis Bacon, though she may have claimed this later on, her mind may have been half gone by then.

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I wonder why some people who have no apparent stake in the question are so hostile to the least curiosity about it. Care to explain what issue you have with this particular area of inquiry and why you have a visceral reaction to this kind of scholarship?

    • @Alacrates
      @Alacrates ปีที่แล้ว

      I think she thought the Shakespeare works were written by a group of Elizabethans, one of which was Francis Bacon.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Now go actually read about Delia Bacon in Winkler's book, to find out what she was really like (rather than just relying on traditionalists' character assassination depiction of her). For one thing, no, she didn't think she was related to Bacon, and disavowed that notion.

  • @SkullyTheHypnoSkull
    @SkullyTheHypnoSkull ปีที่แล้ว +10

    No. Just no. Stop it. I know he looks like Dylan Mulvaney, but knock it off.

  • @two_owls
    @two_owls ปีที่แล้ว +2

    🙄

  • @ishyandmikkischannel8811
    @ishyandmikkischannel8811 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Brilliant interview

  • @southpaw786
    @southpaw786 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Brilliant interview, thank you

  • @derekneville8175
    @derekneville8175 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The tripe people waste their time with.

  • @rangecow
    @rangecow ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This woman pretends not to understand Derrida and all that inconvenient stuff that would point to her irrelevance. I hereby contend.

  • @stanleyrogouski
    @stanleyrogouski ปีที่แล้ว +8

    It would really be funny if in 500 years there's a conspiracy theory that Frank Capra's movies were really written by Franklin Roosevelt. "That little Italian immigrant couldn't have possibly understood America so well. Only an old stock WASP could have written Meet John Doe."

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      *Meet John Doe* was written by Robert Riskin, from a story by Richard Connell and Robert Presnell.

    • @apollocobain8363
      @apollocobain8363 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Capra did not write his movies. For example, "It's a Wonderful Life" is the product of about 5 writers (depending on how you count them). Based on the short story and booklet "The Greatest Gift" self-published by Philip Van Doren Stern in 1943, which itself is loosely based on the 1843 Charles Dickens novella. The screenplay is by Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, Frank Capra and Jo Swerling. "It Happened One Night" and "Lost Horizon" were written by Robert Riskin (who was married to Fay Wray). "Mr Smith Goes to Washington" by Sidney Buchman and Myles Connolly.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@apollocobain8363 So not Franklin Roosevelt. Glad that's cleared up.

  • @cev12
    @cev12 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    But the interview didn't even touch on whether Shakespeare was a woman...

  • @johnnicholas1488
    @johnnicholas1488 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Naw.

  • @brianbutler3318
    @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Basically, you learn why this is BS the first week of grad school.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Makes me want to go to grad school.

  • @gregorywilson2124
    @gregorywilson2124 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Can we stop with the divisive gender politics? Chris you are better than this.

  • @brianbutler3318
    @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    This is the first time I’ve seen Chris’ gullible side

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว +3

      What is gullible about being open to questioning academic holy writ based on shaky grounds?

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@xofpi You're indeed correct: Winkler's questioning is based on very shaky grounds. Also on willfully dishonest grounds. And vastly ignorant of the realities of early modern culture grounds. In fact, it's not so much ground as a heap of sand that Winkler is trying to build her anti-Shakespearian edifice upon.

    • @brianbutler3318
      @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Nullifidian one would think he would have some respect for historical scholarship

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Nullifidian have you read her book?

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@xofpi Yes, I have, at least as much as I could stand so far. I could only stand being lied to for one chapter at a time, and I've currently set it aside after six chapters for things that I actually want to read, though the masochist in me will probably force myself to finish it.

  • @marietjieluyt7619
    @marietjieluyt7619 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Does it matter who "Homer" was?

    • @Alacrates
      @Alacrates ปีที่แล้ว

      I'd take a biography of Homer if I could have one.

  • @MicheleLLOYD-bk2mt
    @MicheleLLOYD-bk2mt ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Sure it was. Lol

  • @PninianPnin
    @PninianPnin ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The idea that Winkler always pedals of the Shakespearian 'priesthood' would perhaps hold more water than it does if the 'authorship question' was a lively field of debate in early modern scholarship outside the immediate remit of Shakespearian studies. She loves to dig her claws into figures like Stanley Wells and James Shapiro but is conspicuously incurious and hazy when it comes to the broader consensus among literary scholars and historians of Early Modern England working outside Shakespeare studies, who are of course considerable in number.
    It's also very funny to hear Winkler railing against Bardolatry when the contemporary exponents of the Shakespeare authorship question are frankly the purest examples of fervid Victorian reverence alive today. If Winkler were seriously interested in working against that strain she could have written a serious, accessible study of the intellectual and literary cultures of Shakespeare's female contemporaries. But the drawback there is that you don't really get to pose as a hard hitting journalist or appear on quite as many podcasts! So instead, she brings them to a popular readership wrapped in theoretical absurdities and crushed under the plays of William Shakespeare.

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Is this like did Shakespeare really write all of his plays????

    • @xofpi
      @xofpi ปีที่แล้ว

      Did you watch it? Is your question one someone who watched it would ask?

    • @grapeshot
      @grapeshot ปีที่แล้ว

      @xofpi did you fart today you better check your underwear.

    • @jimmyfaulkner5746
      @jimmyfaulkner5746 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah , Chris is losing the plot

  • @stephenthestoryteller3139
    @stephenthestoryteller3139 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I need a new deep narrative. Fascinating conversation. Thx for enlightening us. I’m going to dig deeper 🧐

    • @albertfinster4093
      @albertfinster4093 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Look into the speculation that many sonnets, especially sonnet 18, were about Hamnet, Shakespeare's son, and his early death in summer. Also the fact that Hamnet and Hamlet were very similar names.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@albertfinster4093Hamnet and Hamlet were, in fact, identical names. Hamnet Shakespeare was named for his godfather Hamnet Sadler, a local baker. Shakespeare made a bequest to Sadler in his will, though in it he refers to Hamlett Sadler. Sadler's own baptismal record and several Stratford town records also refer to him as Hamlet.

  • @antinorest
    @antinorest ปีที่แล้ว +3

    If it wasn´t Shakespeare but a group of writers, the works have a unity of style that is amazing for a collective effort. I believe this is the work of one man only

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade ปีที่แล้ว +2

      He had collaborators and occasionally revisers. We know this for exactly the reason you stated. You can practically hear the gears grinding in Pericles and Timon of Athens, as the play shifts from one writer to another.

    • @horaceosirian8993
      @horaceosirian8993 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You haven't begun to harm the idea that Shakespeare's works were the result of a group project, since the group could easily have consisted of a range of experts on such topics as law, ancient history, philosophy, geopolitics etc, who supplied knowledge and ideas, and edited those of others, for factual accuracy, plausibility etc, and a writer or writing team, who parsed the narrative ideas into phrases, sentences, paragraphs, dialogue, sections, acts, and plays.

  • @jamesstevenson7725
    @jamesstevenson7725 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    B.S.

  • @peterlangbridge4628
    @peterlangbridge4628 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    His plays were actually written by his wife, Ann Hathaway, who as everyone knows, is also a famous Hollywood actress.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว

      And all this time I thought it was Elena Rubenstein!!!

  • @keithkhan174
    @keithkhan174 ปีที่แล้ว

    ...Or better yet, was Shakespeare a BLACK woman?...or an alien lifeform?..or a migrant?...or... The Python-esqe comedy continues.

  • @robbrown8483
    @robbrown8483 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    then there was Joe Brook a poor orphan whose dad died at age 50, known in his native country as J.S.Bach who became the greatest composer of the Baroque. How could someone of such humble lineage have written all those magnificent works? Does anyone seriously suggest they were composed by someone else? It appears that, like Will, the bard of Avon, he was a towering genius, case closed.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nonsense. JS Bach was schooled by his father, had a prominent teacher, and attended formal education in music. HIs father and uncles were ALL musicians who held professional posts in music. Johann first played the violin and the harpsichord, before being introduced to the organ by one of his uncles. JS Bach has a long history of involvement with the musical world. His was not "humble lineage" by a long shot. Why lie when you don't know???

  • @TheHypnotstCollector
    @TheHypnotstCollector ปีที่แล้ว +1

    NO. whatajoke

  • @dbarker7794
    @dbarker7794 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Since when is it "taboo" to question the authorship of Shakespeare??? When i was in school in the 70s it was a frequently and hotly discussed topic in the English dept. Many scholarly articles and books have been written about this debate.

    • @richardwaugaman1505
      @richardwaugaman1505 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yes, the taboo is alive and well. One Shakespeare newsletter sent me a book to review. I didn't hear from them for months after I submitted my review. Finally, they confessed they would never publish anything written by an authorship doubter.

    • @gortnicktu3177
      @gortnicktu3177 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      There's a long history of careers built upon the Stratford liturgy, not to mention substantial sums of money. That should tell you all you need to know.

    • @dbarker7794
      @dbarker7794 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@gortnicktu3177 Yes I am aware. But that doesn't tell me "all I need to know." Besides, my point is that there is no "taboo" over questioning Shakespeare's authorship. No taboo.
      You object, so show me the taboo!

    • @gortnicktu3177
      @gortnicktu3177 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@dbarker7794 I suggest you begin by listening to the interview that brings you here. Hedges lays out that premise within the first 60 seconds, and it continues from there. But, there are other examples to be sure, including ample demonstrations in the commentary here.

  • @elliesambrook5929
    @elliesambrook5929 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Multiple pens. one name

    • @Yogiholic
      @Yogiholic ปีที่แล้ว

      If one were to assemble the greatest contemporary playwrights of Shakespeare- Jonson, Marlow, Webster, Chapman, Fletcher, etc. -no way on earth could their combined efforts have produced these works. They were clearly produced by a single pen.

  • @brianbutler3318
    @brianbutler3318 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Young men with of Shakespeare’s social class received a thorough education, much of it focused on translating classical literature into both prose and verse. Unless a young woman’s father chose to educate her, she received no formal education.

    • @bonniebluebell5940
      @bonniebluebell5940 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      THE TRUTH of the matter. What we do know as opposed to "much ado about nothing" if there is no proof to back it up.

    • @niemann3942
      @niemann3942 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      So, which is it? On the one hand we're told he didn't know much Latin or Greek (just as the commenter immediately above claimed).
      On the other hand, we're told he got a "thorough education focused on translating classical literature into prose and verse."
      As I just replied immediately above, "And then Shakespeare scholars are forced to turn around and claim, on the other hand, that a rural English grammar school provided the equivalent of a modern graduate degree education in the classics."
      Both of those things can not be true.
      As I also wrote immediately above, "A few years before Shakspere is supposed to have gone there, the Stratford grammar school was listed as owning only ONE book -- a dictionary that was kept chained in the schoolroom." (That is from a source from a respected STRATFORDIAN author.)
      That constant claim which that is made about grammar schools of the time -- solely to shore up the Stratfordians' credentials -- is based on what some contemporary scholars' wrote of as an IDEALIZED grammar school education -- what it WOULD be. It does not mean it actually happened on the ground.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@niemann3942 Well, then why don't you provide the evidence of how "it actually happened on the ground" in Stratford-upon-Avon when Shakespeare would have been attending there, and then we can discuss it.
      And, in fact, the inferences that historians make about Shakespeare's education are _not_ based on "idealized grammar school education", but on what the historical record has left us about what individual grammar schools taught and what curriculum was deemed necessary for students. For example, at Witton, where John Bretchgirdle taught, the curriculum was:
      "
      "the Catechism, and then the Accidence and Grammar set out by King Henry the Eight, or some other if any can be better for the purpose, to induce children more speedily to Latin speech; and then Institutum Christiani Hominis that learned Erasmus made, and then Copia of the same Erasmus, Colloquia Erasmi, Ovidius Metamorphoseos, Terence, Mantuan, Tully, Horace, Sallust, Virgil and such other as shall be thought most convenient to the purpose unto true Latin speech."
      Bretchgirdle later became the local vicar of Stratford-upon-Avon and had his protégé from his time teaching at Oxford, John Brownsword, appointed to the post of schoolmaster. Brownsword, for his part, was a Latin poet whose work was good enough to be noted and praised by Francis Meres in _Palladis Tamia_ . It seems unlikely that Brownsword would have been recommended for the job if he and Bretchgirdle didn't see eye-to-eye on what constituted a proper grammar school education.

  • @vestibulate
    @vestibulate ปีที่แล้ว +21

    Is it possible that Shakespeare was a brilliant man who pursued knowledge on his own from a fairly modest beginning? And could he not have consulted friends, patrons and acquaintances as well for their contributions to learning? He lived in a period that saw an explosion in information and publishing and was heir to an extraordinarily rich tradition of popular art that included song and poetry. I've never seen a compelling argument disqualifying the man we know as Shakespeare from authorship of the works attributed to him.

    • @walterenright8529
      @walterenright8529 ปีที่แล้ว

      Compelling arguments abound. Ask Mark Twain for just one in a long line. Individual brilliance without higher education or world travels is not good enough to convince. Absolutely no handwritten manuscripts or letters from Will of Stratford is compelling in their absence.

    • @jonathan4835
      @jonathan4835 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      By "Is it possible" do you mean to accept that it is unlikely?

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@walterenright8529 We do have a handwritten manuscript. It's Hand D of _Sir Thomas More_ , identified by paleographic analysis as Shakespeare's based on comparison with his signatures and the passage is a stylometric match with the rest of Shakespeare's body of work.

    • @bruceclark4754
      @bruceclark4754 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Much sound and fury signifying nothing, i'm afraid.Many have claimed various other people , other than the Stratford bloke are the author of Shakespeares works; Earl of Oxford, a whole society devoted to this, Christopher Marlowe, Elizabeth 2 etc etc, and the problem is that the evidence is so tenuous, even thinner than that for the afore-mentioned bloke from Stratford , that one could go on arguing the authorship til eternity with no hope of resolution. So, if youre so interested, go and find some facts. Its not that people havent tried. No doubt these academics worry about their cushy jobs, but until dispositive proof is found, taking the orthodox position is no less valid than all of the other possibilities. Until then, bemoaning this situation does indeed, to quote a bloke or blokess or a group of such, ( unless you subscibe to the alien intervention theory currently gaining ground) who may have been raised in Stratford upon Avon but almost certainly lived in England in late 16th and early 17th century, tis a tale told by an over eager jounalist/ wannabe Shakrspeare scholar, full of sound and fury signifying nothing.

    • @apollocobain8363
      @apollocobain8363 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The only writing (hand writing) we have that is associated with the Stratford Shakspere -- 6 signatures on legal documents -- disqualifies him as the author. His absence from all records of payments to play writers (eg. Henslowe's log book) and his lack of involvement with the publishing of works called "Shakespeare" also precludes him being a playwright but the SIGNATURES and the circumstances of those signatures makes it clear that Stratford was ILLITERATE. Stratford's father was illiterate and, more troublingly, his daughter was illiterate and never referred to her father as the author of anything.
      We can't rely on English Department professors to be experts in History, Accounting, Graphology or any of the other sciences which preclude Stratford Shakspere. An interdisciplinary approach is far more reliable and not subject to the politics of academia.
      No two of the signatures are alike. None spell the name "Shakespeare". None have a "e" after the "k" -- this suggests that his name was pronounced like "shack spur" or "shack spear". We also have references to someone called "Shaxberd" with the short a vowel sound. In short according to expert graphologists, legal scholars and historians, these signatures are either attempted by an illiterate man or made on his behalf. The six signatures are, in chronological order: “Willm Shakp”; “William Shaksper”; “Wm Shakspe”; “William Shakspeare”; “Willm Shakspear”; “By me, William Shakspear”.
      For a very thorough look at them and the laws surrounding them:
      shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org/wp-content/uploads/TOX23_Hutchinson_Shaksperes_Signatures.pdf