Shakespeare and the History of Taste: Difference between revisions

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Ben Jonson praised Shakespeare's universality as "not of an age but for all time." Yet, paradoxically, each age has expressed its own particularity by its special accommodation to and appropriation of Shakespeare. If, as Shaw claimed, the Shakespearean canon is "a mirror to nature;' the nature of things is reflected in very different prisms from age to age.
Ben Jonson praised Shakespeare's universality as "not of an age but for all time." Yet, paradoxically, each age has expressed its own particularity by its special accommodation to and appropriation of Shakespeare. If, as Shaw claimed, the Shakespearean canon is "a mirror to nature;' the nature of things is reflected in very different prisms from age to age.


This [[NEH_Summer_Institute_for_college_and_university_faculty|NEH Summer Institute for College and University Faculty]] will approach "Shakespeare and the History of Taste" from two directions: first, the perception of Shakespeare in each age as illustrated in its editions, criticisms. theatrical performances, and visual representations; and second, his influence in each age upon literature, art, music, popular culture, and, frequently, politics.
This [[NEH_Summer_Institute_for_college_and_university_faculty|NEH Summer Institute for College and University Faculty]] approached "Shakespeare and the History of Taste" from two directions: first, the perception of Shakespeare in each age as illustrated in its editions, criticisms. theatrical performances, and visual representations; and second, his influence in each age upon literature, art, music, popular culture, and, frequently, politics.
 
Institute participants explored the rich holdings of primary and secondary materials in the Folger Shakespeare library: texts and translations, critical and historical studies, paintings and musical scores, theatrical records and memorabilia, unpublished memoirs and scrapbooks, newspaper clippings and popular miscellanies.
 


Institute participants will explore the rich holdings of primary and secondary materials in the Folger Shakespeare library: texts and translations, critical and historical studies, paintings and musical scores, theatrical records and memorabilia, unpublished memoirs and scrapbooks, newspaper clippings and popular miscellanies.


[[File:ART_File_S527_no.193_(size_M).jpg|thumb|679x679px|[https://luna.folger.edu/luna/servlet/s/fs650h Source Call No. ART File S527 no.193 (size M)]: Shakespeare [graphic] / Marckle, del. ; Hopwood, sculp.]]  
[[File:ART_File_S527_no.193_(size_M).jpg|thumb|679x679px|[https://luna.folger.edu/luna/servlet/s/fs650h Source Call No. ART File S527 no.193 (size M)]: Shakespeare [graphic] / Marckle, del. ; Hopwood, sculp.]]  
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'''SHAKESPEARE IN HIS OWN AGE'''
'''SHAKESPEARE IN HIS OWN AGE'''


The institute will begin by examining the extent to which Shakespeare conformed to the traditions of Renaissance drama and to popular taste and the extent to which he was an experimenter against the fashions and prejudices of the time.
The institute began by examining the extent to which Shakespeare conformed to the traditions of Renaissance drama and to popular taste and the extent to which he was an experimenter against the fashions and prejudices of the time.


'''SHAKESPEARE FOR EACH AGE'''  
'''SHAKESPEARE FOR EACH AGE'''  


Participants will go on to examine how Shakespeare was viewed in the moral climate of the Restoration, under the neo-classical rules of the eighteenth century, through the romantic vision of the nineteenth century, into the twentieth century with his adoption as "our contemporary," and as imported into other cultures. Particular attention will be paid to what pleased, what offended in each period.
Participants went on to examine how Shakespeare was viewed in the moral climate of the Restoration, under the neo-classical rules of the eighteenth century, through the romantic vision of the nineteenth century, into the twentieth century with his adoption as "our contemporary," and as imported into other cultures. Particular attention was paid to what pleased, what offended in each period.


'''SHAKESPEARE AS LEGEND AND MYTH'''  
'''SHAKESPEARE AS LEGEND AND MYTH'''  


Group members will explore the steps by which Shakespeare's influence led from legend, to a full-blown mythology peopled by the characters he created, to the quasideification of"bardolatry" to a twentieth-century debunking of the myth that has not prevented the permeation of Shakespeare into every aspect of culture, from advertising to philosophy.
Group members explored the steps by which Shakespeare's influence led from legend, to a full-blown mythology peopled by the characters he created, to the quasideification of"bardolatry" to a twentieth-century debunking of the myth that has not prevented the permeation of Shakespeare into every aspect of culture, from advertising to philosophy.


'''SHAKESPEARE AND THE THEATRE'''  
'''SHAKESPEARE AND THE THEATRE'''  


An especially rich source oflnvestigation will be the records of performances over four centuries. Participants will attempt to recover the very different Hamlets, Shylocks, and Othellos of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries and of the astonishingly various cultures that have adopted Shakespeare.
An especially rich source of investigation was the records of performances over four centuries. Participants attempted to recover the very different Hamlets, Shylocks, and Othellos of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries and of the astonishingly various cultures that have adopted Shakespeare.




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[[Category: 16th century]]
[[Category: 16th century]]
[[Category: 17th century]]
[[Category: 17th century]]
[[Category:2010-Summer]]

Latest revision as of 15:26, 4 August 2017

Directed by Joseph G. Price, Professor of English at the Pennsylvania State University

June 18 through July 27, 1990

Ben Jonson praised Shakespeare's universality as "not of an age but for all time." Yet, paradoxically, each age has expressed its own particularity by its special accommodation to and appropriation of Shakespeare. If, as Shaw claimed, the Shakespearean canon is "a mirror to nature;' the nature of things is reflected in very different prisms from age to age.

This NEH Summer Institute for College and University Faculty approached "Shakespeare and the History of Taste" from two directions: first, the perception of Shakespeare in each age as illustrated in its editions, criticisms. theatrical performances, and visual representations; and second, his influence in each age upon literature, art, music, popular culture, and, frequently, politics.

Institute participants explored the rich holdings of primary and secondary materials in the Folger Shakespeare library: texts and translations, critical and historical studies, paintings and musical scores, theatrical records and memorabilia, unpublished memoirs and scrapbooks, newspaper clippings and popular miscellanies.


Source Call No. ART File S527 no.193 (size M): Shakespeare [graphic] / Marckle, del. ; Hopwood, sculp.

SHAKESPEARE IN HIS OWN AGE

The institute began by examining the extent to which Shakespeare conformed to the traditions of Renaissance drama and to popular taste and the extent to which he was an experimenter against the fashions and prejudices of the time.

SHAKESPEARE FOR EACH AGE

Participants went on to examine how Shakespeare was viewed in the moral climate of the Restoration, under the neo-classical rules of the eighteenth century, through the romantic vision of the nineteenth century, into the twentieth century with his adoption as "our contemporary," and as imported into other cultures. Particular attention was paid to what pleased, what offended in each period.

SHAKESPEARE AS LEGEND AND MYTH

Group members explored the steps by which Shakespeare's influence led from legend, to a full-blown mythology peopled by the characters he created, to the quasideification of"bardolatry" to a twentieth-century debunking of the myth that has not prevented the permeation of Shakespeare into every aspect of culture, from advertising to philosophy.

SHAKESPEARE AND THE THEATRE

An especially rich source of investigation was the records of performances over four centuries. Participants attempted to recover the very different Hamlets, Shylocks, and Othellos of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries and of the astonishingly various cultures that have adopted Shakespeare.


Materials

A PDF of the original Promotional Materials.


Faculty

JONATHAN BATE

TERENCE HAWKES

JEANNE T. NEWLIN

STEPHEN ORGEL


Other Paricipating Faculty Members

Staff members from the Folger Shakespeare library, the Folger Consort, and the Shakespeare Theatre at the Folger. In addition, a major Shakespearean actor from London and Stratford-upon-Avon will demonstrate acting styles and preferences through the evolution of Shakespearean performance.


For more past programming from the Folger Institute, please see the article Folger Institute scholarly programs archive.


Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humanities website.