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Films about Queer History

 

William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616)

Online Resources
Texts:  William Shakespeare
Texts:  Shakespeare's Sonnets
Films:  Shakespeare
Music:  Shakespeare
Used Books:  Shakespeare
      

      

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Love Poems and Sonnets of William Shakespeare

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William Shakespeare the Complete WorksWilliam Shakespeare the Complete Works by William Shakespeare

The new Oxford edition of Shakespeare's complete works reconsiders every detail of their text and presentation in the light of modern scholarship. The nature and authority of the early documents are re-examined, and the canon and chronological order of composition freshly established. Spelling and punctuation are modernized, and there is a brief introduction to each work, as well as an illuminating and informative General Introduction. OUP and Shakespeare's Globe Theatre this year embark on an official partnership to celebrate the plays both in print and performance -- this reissued and rejacketed edition of the complete works underscores the commitment.

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Lectures on ShakespeareLectures on Shakespeare by W. H. Auden, Arthur C. Kirsch (Editor)

After transplanting himself from England to the United States in 1939, W.H. Auden immediately became a kind of academic knight-errant, teaching at five different schools in as many years. Little evidence survives of most of these gigs. But in 1946, Auden gave a course on Shakespeare at Manhattan's New School, and luckily, several of the students attending took maniacally assiduous notes. Now Arthur Kirsch has collated the whole batch--and, one assumes, done some major nip-and-tuck work on this textual nightmare. The result is an insightful, eccentric, and perhaps essential slice of Bardolatry, which tells us as much about Auden as his subject.

Nobody can accuse Auden of parroting the party line on this greatest of English writers. In one of the nuttier moments in the lecture series, in fact, he expressed his distaste for The Merry Wives of Windsor by declining to say a word about it--instead he simply played a recording of Verdi's Falstaff for the perplexed audience. Elsewhere his tendency was to view Shakespeare's creations as flesh-and-blood characters rather than poetic constructs: "If Antony and Cleopatra have a more tragic fate than we do, that is because they are far more successful than we are, not because they are essentially different." He's harder pressed to locate any success stories in Julius Ceasar: the protagonist strikes him as a fading despot, Octavius is "a very cold fish," and Cassius "a choleric man--a General Patton." And sometimes, as in this discussion of Falstaff's role in the double-decker Henry IV, Auden spins off his own freestanding riffs, which amount to short prose poems on Shakespearean themes:
 

A fat man looks like a cross between a very young child and a pregnant mother. The Greeks thought of Narcissus as a slender youth, but I think they were wrong. I see him as a middle-aged man with a corporation, for, however ashamed he may be of displaying it in public, in private a man with a belly loves it dearly--it may be an unprepossessing child to look at, but he's borne it all by himself.
Auden would return to the Bard's terrain many times in his career, most notably in "The Sea and the Mirror." But for sheer penetration and puckish humor, Lectures on Shakespeare is hard to beat, and demonstrates that for all their differences, both the speaker and his subject had a crucial thing in common--what Auden calls "a fabulously good taste for words." --James Marcus

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Homosexual Desire in Shakespeare's England : A Cultural Poetics by Bruce R. Smith

In the most comprehensive study yet of homosexuality in the English Renaissance, Bruce R. Smith examines and rejects the assessments of homosexual acts in moral philosophy, laws, and medical books in favor of a poetics of homosexual desire. Smith isolates six different "myths" from classical literature and discusses each in relation to a particular Renaissance literary genre and to a particular part of the social structure of early modern England. Smith's new Preface places his work in the context of the continuing controversies in gay, lesbian, and bisexual studies.

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Shakespeare Censored

By Govind

Excerpt:

Homosexuality is another sensitive issue in modern society, and homosexual and gender issues (e.g. cross-dressing) in Shakespeare's work have come under attack recently. In 1996, Merrimack, New Hampshire schools banned Twelfth Night when the school board prohibited "alternative lifestyle instruction." (Ockerbloom) Does Twelfth Night even truly depict "alternative lifestyles", much less "instruct" one in them? The Christian Science Monitor also listed Twelfth Night as one of the books challenged in school libraries in 1996-97, presumably for the same incident...

  

Coming Out in Shakespeare's The Two Gentlemen of Verona

J. L. Simmons, The Johns Hopkins University

Death and desire, murder and homoerotics, are juxtaposed in this vaguely sado-masochistic environment, a kind of explosively erotic violence that we can see in B. R. Burg's study of sodomy as an erotic cult of male bonding among seventeenth-century pirates. Bruce Smith has recently reminded us of the generic association of the pastoral world with homoeroticism, and Shakespeare reinvigorates the classical scene with the native homoerotics of Robin Hood's merry band...

  

How to Do The History of Male Homosexuality

By David M. Halperin

Excerpt:

Hercules sets the stage for such modern figures as Shakespeare's Mark Antony, who claims Hercules as his literal ancestor in Antony and Cleopatra and who incurs similar charges of effeminacy when he takes time out from ruling the Roman Empire to live a life of passion and indulgence with Cleopatra. The roles of ruler and lover are made to contrast from the very opening of the play, when Antony is described as "the triple pillar of the world transform'd / Into a strumpet's fool" (1.1.12-13). Antony is not unique in Shakespeare. Othello also voices anxieties about the incapacitating effects of conjugal love on a military leader. But this tension is best represented by Shakespeare's Romeo, who, berating himself for a lack of martial ardor and invoking the traditional opposition between the cold, wet melancholia of love and the hot, dry nature of masculine virtue, exclaims...

   

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