
Shakespeare Was a Woman and Other Heresies
How Doubting the Bard Became the Biggest Taboo in Literature
- 400 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Shakespeare Was a Woman and Other Heresies
How Doubting the Bard Became the Biggest Taboo in Literature
About this book
An "extraordinarily brilliant" and "pleasurably naughty" (AndrĆ© Aciman) investigation into the Shakespeare authorship question, exploring how doubting that William Shakespeare wrote his plays became an act of blasphemyā¦and who the Bard might really be. The theory that Shakespeare may not have written the works that bear his name is the most horrible, unspeakable subject in the history of English literature. Scholars admit that the Bard's biography is a "black hole, " yet to publicly question the identity of the god of English literature is unacceptable, even (some say) "immoral."In Shakespeare Was a Woman and Other Heresies, journalist and literary critic Elizabeth Winkler sets out to probe the origins of this literary taboo. Whisking you from London to Stratford-Upon-Avon to Washington, DC, she pulls back the curtain to show how the forces of nationalism and empire, religion and mythmaking, gender and class have shaped our admiration for Shakespeare across the centuries. As she considers the writers and thinkersāfrom Walt Whitman to Sigmund Freud to Supreme Court justicesāwho have grappled with the riddle of the plays' origins, she explores who may perhaps have been hiding behind his name. A forgotten woman? A disgraced aristocrat? A government spy? Hovering over the mystery are Shakespeare's plays themselves, with their love for mistaken identities, disguises, and things never quite being what they seem.As she interviews scholars and skeptics, Winkler's interest turns to the larger problem of historical truthāand of how human imperfections (bias, blindness, subjectivity) shape our construction of the past. History is a story, and the story we find may depend on the story we're looking for."Lively" ( The Washington Post ), "fascinating" (Amanda Foreman), and "intrepid" (Stacy Schiff), Shakespeare Was a Woman and Other Heresies will forever change how you think of Shakespeareā¦and of how we as a society decide what's up for debate and what's just nonsense, just heresy.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Epigraph
- Prologue
- Chapter One: The Question That Does Not Exist
- Chapter Two: Biographical Fiction
- Chapter Three: Crafty Cuttle
- Chapter Four: Seeliest Ignorance
- Chapter Five: Bardolatry
- Chapter Six: Aberration and the Academy
- Chapter Seven: Wolfish Earls
- Chapter Eight: Purple Robes Distained
- Chapter Nine: Some Heaven-Born Goddess
- Chapter Ten: The Reckoning
- Chapter Eleven: Negative Capability
- Epilogue
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- Notes
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
- Credits
- Copyright