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Glasgow Thesis

 

"All the World's a Stage": William Blake and William Shakespeare

MacPhee, Chantelle L. (2002) "All the World's a Stage": William Blake and William Shakespeare. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow.
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    Abstract

    Shakespeare's presence in Blake's poetry has been virtually unrecognised by scholarly criticism except, of course, for Jonathan Bate's groundbreaking work of 1986. Bate has had no major successors, so this thesis is, then, an attempt to close to lacuna, to restore Shakespeare to the place that was recognized by Blake himself, as a major influence on his work. In my introductory chapter, I offer a brief sketch of the manner in which Shakespeare informed the culture of the later eighteenth century of which Blake was a product. I survey Shakespearean production, staging and acting techniques, and the history of textual reproduction, before turning to an aspect of the Shakespearean tradition of particular importance to Blake, the production of illustrated editions of Shakespeare's work, and the recourse to Shakespearean subject matter of the painters of the later eighteenth century. I end this chapter with an account of Blake's own Shakespearean illustrations. In Chapter 2, I focus on the earliest of Blake's poems to show a clear Shakespearean influence, the dramatic fragments: "Prologue to King John", Edward the Third, and "Prologue to Edward the Fourth". The major model for these early poetic experiments is, of course, the Shakespearean history or chronicle play, but I argue that even in these apprentice works Blake's appropriation of the Shakespearean model is complex. Shakespeare's history plays celebrate the emergence of an England that, as the defeat of the Spanish Armada demonstrated, had emerged as one of Europe's most powerful nation states. The most pressing political context for Blake's dramatic fragments is England's loss of America, its greatest overseas colony. The fragments are addressed, then, not to a confident nation, proud of its newfound position in the world, but to a nation that had very recently suffered a major blow to its confidence. Already evident, too in these early fragments is Blake's distrust of the Shakespearean notion, flamboyantly expressed in a play such as Henry V, that a nation's greatness might appropriately be measured by its military successes, particularly in war against another state.
    Item Type:Thesis (PhD)
    Qualification Level:Doctoral
    Subjects:P Language and Literature > PR English literature
    Colleges/Schools:College of Arts > School of Critical Studies > English Literature
    Supervisor's Name:Cronin, Prof. Richard and Prickett, Prof. Stephen
    Date of Award:2002
    Depositing User:Ms Aniko Szilagyi
    Unique ID:glathesis:2002-3467
    Copyright:Copyright of this thesis is held by the author.
    Date Deposited:21 Jun 2012
    Last Modified:10 Dec 2012 14:07
    URI:http://theses.gla.ac.uk/id/eprint/3467

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