shakespeare renaissance

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Shakespeare A Renaissance Man? Kees IJzerman, February 2015

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Page 1: Shakespeare renaissance

ShakespeareA Renaissance Man?

Kees IJzerman, February 2015

Page 2: Shakespeare renaissance

Let’s start at home…….

Pyramus and ThisbeBy Lucas van Gassel1540-1550Gemeentemuseum Helmond

Page 3: Shakespeare renaissance

Pyramus and Thisbe ( )

• Grew up next door to one another

• Families quarreled

• Talked through a crack in the garden wall

• Agreed to meet in the graveyard under mulberry tree

• Thisbe early; lioness with bloody jaw; she hides in cave; loses mantle

• Lioness tears mantle; Pyramus arrives & sees bloodied mantle

• P kills himself; Th comes out of cave; sees dying P and kills herself.

• Reminds you of a story?

Page 4: Shakespeare renaissance

Ovid

• Metamorphoses (AD 1)

• 1565 translation into English

• Shakespeare used it as an inspiration (as did Chaucer earlier)

• Romeo and Juliet / A Midsummer Night’s Dream

• Admiration for and finding inspiration in the Art of the ancients was of course a characteristic of the Renaissance.

• But is there more?

Page 5: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance man

• Inspiration for plays in ancient Greek and Roman art (introduction)

• Inspiration for poems in the same

• Science

• Philosophy

Page 6: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance ManPoetry

• Venus and Adonis (Ovid)

• The Rape of Lucrece (Ovid and Livy)

Both of these narrative poems were writtenwhen theatres were closed b.o. the plague.

• Sonnets

Page 7: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance ManPoetry - Sonnets

• Petrarch (Laura Sonnets) < Ovid(abba abba cde cde or abba abba cdc dcd)

• Shakespeare perfected and adapted the form: Shakespearean Sonnets(abab cdcd efef gg)

• Shakespearean sonnet not based upon the Ancients (apart from 153 and 154; translations)

Page 8: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance Man2. Poetry - Sonnets

Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?Thou art more lovely and more temperate:Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,And summer's lease hath all too short a date:Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,And often is his gold complexion dimm'd;And every fair from fair sometime declines,By chance, or nature's changing course, untrimm'd;But thy eternal summer shall not fadeNor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st;Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st;So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.

Man is more (lovely etc.) than nature

YOUR beauty is eternal, as opposed to that of the sun

Anthropocentric = Renaissance!

Page 9: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance Man - Science

• From Romeo and Juliet:

O, then, I see Queen Mab hath been with you.She is the fairies' midwife, and she comesIn shape no bigger than an agate-stoneOn the fore-finger of an alderman,Drawn with a team of little atomiesAthwart men's noses as they lie asleep;Her wagon-spokes made of long spinners' legs,The cover of the wings of grasshoppers,The traces of the smallest spider's web,

What did The Bard know about

atoms???

Page 10: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance Man - Science

• Lucretius poem ‘De Rerum Natura’ (‘On the Nature of Things’)

• Epicurus (~300 B.C.): - Everything consist of invisible particles (atoms).- They are eternal.- They are in motion in an otherwise empty space (void).- the universe has no creator and is not for or about humans.- the soul dies & there is no afterlife.- organised religion is a superstition.- religions are cruel (retribution; children sacrificed by a parent).

Needless to say: the catholic Church wanted to repress these thoughtsand the poem containing them.

Page 11: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance Man - Science

• Arguably, Shakespeare knew about Galileo’s heliocentric model.(He has, for example, Jupiter surrounded by four moons.)

• Hamlet can be read as a metaphor for the controversy between the old geocentric vs. the new heliocentric model.

Page 12: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance Man - Philosophy

• “To thine own self be true”

• “We are such stuffAs dreams are made on; and our little lifeIs rounded with a sleep.”

• “Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player,That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,And then is heard no more. It is a taleTold by an idiot, full of sound and fury,Signifying nothing.”

Quotes like these show thatShakespeare had no time for an‘afterlife’ We die. That’s where it ends.

This is an distinctly unreligiousthought.

Page 13: Shakespeare renaissance

Shakespeare as a Renaissance Man – So, was he?

• Both plays and poems lean heavily on Ovid.

• He was aware of ancient scientific and philosophical ideas.

• He was aware of scientific progress.

• Both sonnets and plays contain humanistic ideas

• Shakespeare was very much a man of his time!