warpus
Sommerswerd asked me to change this
Hell, I had one of my coworkers ask me what era and what years Game of Thrones took place (!!!!!!).
Does he know there are dragons?.. on the show but not in real life?
Hell, I had one of my coworkers ask me what era and what years Game of Thrones took place (!!!!!!).
He pretty much unified the English language... pretty important.
While some of it is archaic today, it set the stage.
He (or whoever) also came up with some seriously amazing phrases, etc.
Don't forget the religious undertones of "Genius" especially before it got it's up to date eugenics based undertones. That one crops up a lot with Shakespeare.
Pangur Bán;13317515 said:On being warranted / unwarranted, that sort of misses the point, if it wasn't Shakespeare it would be someone else fulfilling that role.
I don't think it does miss the point. I understand it as the point of this whole thread insofar as I understand the OP to be asking us if S's "hype is deserved."
Your answer tends in the direction of suggesting it is not deserved: the elites needed something to mark their greater culture, so they picked Shakespeare and turned him signifier of culture(edness) ("culture" by itself would once have been the word for this, but that word has been now pressed into other uses). Your "something else" claim here suggests that it is not because of his own merit that Shakespeare has the hype he has; that his canonicity is largely or wholly a result of extrinsic factors rather than intrinsic ones. At least it seems to me that it tends in that direction; you've certainly never flatly answered Terx's question in the affirmative.
I'm making the opposite claim as I understand you to be making, but let me make it more bluntly than I have so far made it: Shakespeare is the greatest user of the English language ever. He is so great at using the English language that an institution for studying his works has grown up, primarily or wholly as a result of those superior language skills. One's mastery of Shakespeare does serve as a cultural marker; I'm not gainsaying that. But the hype is deserved. In fact, I believe he deserves a good deal more hype than our culture presently affords him, if you can believe that. (I gave a hint as to why on the recent Racism and the Politics of Grammar thread.)
The OP asked us whether S's hype is deserved. If you had to give a simple yes/no answer to that question, which would you give? I've been reading you that your answer would be no. But, of course, I'll let you answer for yourself.
Thank you for clarifying.I said that your position wasn't based on falsehoods.
Yeah, I seem to recall mentioning that seeing them performed makes them easier to understand than just reading them.I think we are forgetting that the thing 21st century people don't understand about Shakespere are based on the fact that people read about these plays in some massive textbook without actually seeing them. 16th century common people understood these plays mostly because it was displayed in front of them, you think if you handed Piers the poor Hereford farmer a copy of Troilus and Cressida he would know what was going on? Most likely not, but that's because people didn't read about these plays in 1578 or whatever, they went to see them. Let's also talk about the fact that if you put on a display of one of Shakespere's history plays, 21st century people aren't going to get it most likely. Hell, I had one of my coworkers ask me what era and what years Game of Thrones took place (!!!!!!).
Let me be clear. There is no cult. Shakespeare is a literary figure, not a religious figure.Pangur Bán;13317515 said:Let me be clear, I didn't say that Shakespeare's cult was unwarranted.
Pangur Bán;13317626 said:I remain to be convinced that a guy dramatizing pop history for some Londoners around 1600 was the 'greatest user of the English language ever'
EDIT:
Let me be clear. There is no cult. Shakespeare is a literary figure, not a religious figure.
Illegitimacy doesn't matter much nowadays, but back in Tudor times, it mattered a lot to the nobles and royalty of Europe. It was just an accepted thing that children born to lawfully married couples were better and more deserving, both in material comforts and in terms of honor, social status, and friendship than children born to unmarried people. So yeah, Don John was a bastard both in terms of his birth and his personality. He was jealous of his half-brother, and apt to take any opportunity to ruin other peoples' happiness, just for the hell of it. Some people are like that - not happy until they've made everyone else miserable.I see, so he's a literal bastard? I think someone called him a bastard but it sounded to me like he was just saying he was a bastard for his part in Kate Beckinsale's death, not that he was an illegitimate son. Still, him being a bastard doesn't make his character any less silly. So he's just evil for the sake of it? We know he's evil because he's a bastard?
It seems an extreme reaction to modern audiences, but Hero's honor was besmirched in a despicable way, and shock is not an inappropriate reaction.I have no idea why the shock of being accused of infidelity would cause Kate Beckinsale's "death". I suppose back in the 16th/17th Century this sort of thing was common, and women would often drop dead when they were accused of being unfaithful. I can suspend my disbelief for that, I suppose, as a sign of the times, but I found it hard to understand. As a plot point, it certainly doesn't hold up well.
Pangur Bán;13317727 said:Keep in mind, Gori, the thousands of court, household, village and itinerant bards who have been replaced by the literary cult heroes of the English of the winner-take-all age of print. These guys had the qualities you are talking about and praising Shakespeare for, but almost every single one of them is unknown.
Enough for one post. If forum posts get too lengthy, they turn off the tl;dr crowd.