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From TheAtlasphere.com Review For many readers, Shakespeare is known as the dramatist who immortalized man's fatal flaws with great talent — the poet who used his imagination and wit to portray the defeat of potential heroes by their weaknesses. That Shakespeare should be identified with his tragedies, however, is indicative only of the person (or culture) making the identification, not of the bard himself. The heavens themselves, the planets, and this center When Shakespeare's entire oeuvre is examined, what emerges is a linguistic, artistic, and psychological genius. Shakespeare's language is a landmark in the transition from Middle English to Modern English. His neologisms and epigrams transformed the English language. The enduring popularity of his plays almost 400 years after his death and their successful transfer from the theater to the movies is a good indication of his greatness as a dramatist. The perceptiveness and depth of his portrayal of a vast variety of characters from all walks of life leave no doubt about his psychological insight. His plays express vividly the souls of heroes and villains alike. Shakespeare's characters follow the principle defined by Aristotle in his Poetics: "In character portrayal, as in plot construction, one should always strive for either the necessary or the probable, so that it is either necessary or probable for that kind of person to do or say that kind of thing, just as it is for one event to follow the other." (Trans. Gerald Else, University of Michigan Press, 1967, 1454a33-36) Each action is in accord with the character's personality and each character has his reasons for his actions. The villains have a reason to be evil, which they are aware of and share with the audience. Their actions are intelligible, if not justifiable. Consider Richard III's soliloquy: I that am rudely stamped and want love's majesty If ever there was a moment of conscious, deliberate, free choice — this was it. The Aristotlean principle of the Golden Mean fares high in Shakespeare's mores. Following one's passions to extremes proves to be ludicrous (Titania falls in love with an ass in A Midsummer Night's Dream), reckless (Claudio denounces his bride without examining the evidence in Much Ado About Nothing), or cataclysmic (Othello kills Desdemona). Reason is upheld as a desirable, if not always practiced, virtue. Says Hamlet: Give me that man In his review of Shakespeare's Twenty-First Century Economics: The Morality of Love and Money by Frederick Turner, Paul A. Cantor points out that: in Shakespeare's treatment of marriage, he does not divorce financial considerations from emotional ones, as a Romantic poet would. In Shakespeare, the successful marriage is a very practical matter and unites emotional and financial well-being. That is why he ultimately focuses on the marriage bond. Turner makes much of such dual meanings in Shakespeare, when such words as trust, interest, debt, redeem, and venture have at once spiritual and financial significance. ("Capitalism's Poet Laureate," Reason, March 2000) Interestingly, most of Shakespeare's comedies can be termed tragicomedies. Their plots include a potential tragedy that is averted by an accidental sequence of events as well as by the actions of the characters. For example, in Much Ado About Nothing, a bride is publicly charged with infidelity by her jealous groom through the schemes of her father's enemy. The groom's best friend is pressured to challenge him to a duel and the bride's father's alliance with the groom's military Commander is shattered. Only the friend's level-headedness prevents Much Ado About Nothing from deteriorating into a full-fledged tragedy. Soon, the villain's scheme is revealed by the father's guards, who overhear an accomplice bragging about his mischief, and all ends well. Such an accidental development, however, is not necessarily a matter of random luck. It demonstrates that evil is ultimately impotent and that the good triumphs at the end. Indeed, Much Ado About Nothing is a good place to start for someone who wants to discover Shakespeare's benevolent side — his merriment, joy, and delight. ![]() Michelle Fram Cohen, a native of Israel, has lived in the United States since 1981. She holds an M.A. in Comparative Literature and works as a computer programmer and a freelance translator and writer. Her writings have been published in Navigator, The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies, and Full Context. She currently resides in Maryland with her husband and son. © Copyright 2004-7 by The Atlasphere LLC |
