We happy few prior to Wells' event Aug. 16, 2013 in Stratford, Ontario: George and Sharon Hunter, Tom and Joy Townsend, Pam Verlone (hidden), Rosey Hunter, Richard Joyrich, Rey Perez, Linda Theil
By Linda Theil
Several members of the Oberon Shakespeare Study Group
visited Stratford, Ontario this weekend to hear Shakespeare Birthplace Trust life
trustee and former chairman Stanley Wells give a talk at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival on August 16, 2013.
We found Wells a masterful speaker. A fine-looking
man, with a shock of white hair and emphatic white brows, tie-less in a grey
suit and wearing his signature pink dress shirt with flesh-colored stockings and
oxfords, he read from a superb, prepared text on “Sex and Love in Verona,
Venice and Vienna”.
In the question and answer session post-presentation,
therefore, it came as a shock to hear this elegant, accomplished
gentleman lead the audience in jeering laughter against those, like my friends
and I who question the Stratfordian authorship attribution, refer to as “anti-Shakespeareans” – a name none of us would
choose for ourselves.
In monetary terms, alone – terms we surmise the Shakespeare Birthplace
Trust finds compelling – our contribution to the Shakespeare enterprise -- in
book-buying, ticket-buying, and travel – is enormous. This weekend’s jaunt cost
over $2000 for play tickets and another $1500 for rooms and food. All of us devote
extraordinary amounts of time and money to our passion for the great work of
Shakespeare.
To throw this kind of this kind of devotion out the window
and label it anti-Shakespearean strikes us as the height of folly. But
name-calling is the resort of many Stratfordians who cannot resist venting
their fury at those who question the authorship of the Stratfordian candidate.
A recent example of this type of Stratfordian strategy appears
in the comments section of Wells’ review of John Shahan’s Shakespeare Beyond Doubt? Exposing an Industry in Denial where a commentator provided an assessment of those who dare to doubt the
Stratford candidate’s validity as the author of Shakespeare’s works, comparing
anti-Strat Oxfordians to the apartied regime in South Africa. Alasdair Brown on
Aug. 13, 2013 said:
. . . There’s the same meanness of spirit. The same depressing view of humanity. The same anti-democratic impulses. The same construction of fundamental human differences. The same smug sense of superiority. The same perception of a divinely sanctioned order of things. The same distortion of history. The same denial of human capability and potential. We’re not just talking about people who are bonkers or intellectually challenged. We are talking about people whose ideas are insidious, reactionary and dangerous. . . .
This type of spittle-filled invective is, in my experience,
typical of Stratfordian discourse.
Having this tactic of ridicule repeated this weekend at the
great Ontario festival -- where my friends and I have gone year after year to learn about Shakespeare’s great art -- was painful. All of us are professionals,
most hold advanced degrees. In everyday life, none of us is commonly abused for
inadequate intellectual capabilities.
Yet, when Wells finished his talk, and an audience-member
opened the discussion with the question: “Would you comment on the perpetuation of Shakespeare
deniers despite scholars like yourself who have settled the matter?” Wells
replied: “Human folly goes on, despite every effort . . .” raising a derisive
laugh from the audience.
Ridicule is intended to give pain. Perhaps perpetrators such
as Wells consider this pain is deserved and/or instructive, but regardless of
the justification, the intention is the same – hurt the bad people; make them
too ashamed to continue their “folly”.
Shaming is a very effective tactic against humans. When Wells
equates anti-Stratfordians with holocaust deniers as he did yesterday, as James
Shapiro did previously in this same venue, and as many others have done elsewhere,
I am personally repelled. If causing pain is their goal, they have succeeded;
but bullying is not an argument, and if their goal is to convince me that
Shaksper from Stratford is the author of Shakespeare’s work, by using this
tactic they are the ones engaged in folly, not I.
I would have answered that audience member’s question
differently. I would have told him that -- for me -- the question of the
Shakespeare authorship is far from settled.
And why, indeed, should I be ridiculed for my position? Since when has research and study become an abomination? Since Stanley Wells says it has? Why
should I bow to Professor Wells’ authority when all my life I have been taught
that thinking and learning, considering, and judging for myself is my personal responsibility?
At the end of his presentation, Wells was joined by Paul
Edmondson, co-author of their recent book, Shakespeare Beyond Doubt – a
compendium of commentary attempting to refute questions about the Stratfordian
attribution of Shakespeare’s works.
They said they wrote their book:
They opined the authorship contagion may have spread elsewhere, perhaps not aware that Don Rubin who had convened a class on Shakespeare authorship last year at Toronto’s York University was in their audience.
- in response to questions about the authorship controversy from visitors to the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust in Stratford, England;
- in response to Roland Emmerich's 2011 anti-Stratfordian film Anonymous;
- and in response to university courses on Shakespeare authorship being taught at London’s Brunel University and Portland Oregon’s Concordia University – a development they clearly consider an abomination.
They opined the authorship contagion may have spread elsewhere, perhaps not aware that Don Rubin who had convened a class on Shakespeare authorship last year at Toronto’s York University was in their audience.
During the discussion, Edmondson promoted the idea of collaborative authorship
as the future of Shakespearean studies.
“Collaboration puts paid to the theory that any single
nominee falls by the wayside, don’t they?” Edmondson said. “. . . Collaborative
authorship studies is a new way of thinking about this discussion. There’s
something significant and serious about this discussion (of collaboration).”
Edmondson clearly, by these and other comments yesterday, supports
the recent and growing interest in collaboration as a viable Shakespeare
authorship theory.
I personally view the recent interest in collaboration as an
attempt to keep the Stratfordian candidate viable in the face of increasing critical pressure on his lack of credential in terms of knowledge and experience.
While continuing to insist on the Stratfordian candidate’s
adequacy, Stratfordian supporters studying Shakespearean collaboration,
nevertheless, shore up his bonifides with assist from other sixteenth- and
seventeenth-century writers; similar, or so I have read recently, to a stable
of writers working on a TV sitcom – a position I find pathetically
anachronistic.
But this tacit admission of an authorship problem is
encouraging to anti-Strats, and will no doubt lead to a gradual diminishment of
the Stratfordian candidate. In Edmondson’s ungrammatical, but potent, remark
that collaboration theory “puts paid” to “any single nominee” – which is
presumably a blow to anti-Strat aspirations – Edmondson neglects to comprehend that
destroying “any single nominee” includes the destruction of the Stratford
candidate, since he is also a “single nominee”.
Edmondson also doesn’t seem to be aware that William Leahy,
creator of the despised Shakespeare authorship studies program at Brunel, is
himself an advocate of a collaboration theory of authorship. So we have the
ludicrous image of furious contestants on both sides of the authorship battle
agreeing on a theory of authorship.
Does this mean the war is won?
Does this mean the war is won?
Resources:
Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. http://www.shakespeare.org.uk/home.html
Stratford (Ontario) Shakespeare Festival, http://www.stratfordfestival.ca
Wells' review of Shahan's Shakespeare Beyond Doubt? Exposing an Industry in Denial,
http://interestingliterature.wordpress.com/2013/07/28/guest-blog-shakespeare-beyond-doubt/
Shakespeare Birthplace Trust's free booklet "Shakespeare Bites Back" reposte to authorship questions,
http://bloggingshakespeare.com/shakespeare-bites-back-the-book
Proving Shakespeare webinar with Marlovian anti-Strat Ros Barber,
http://bloggingshakespeare.com/webinars/proving-shakespeare
Shakespeare Beyond Doubt? Exposing an Industry in Denial edited by John Shahan and Alexander Waugh, https://doubtaboutwill.org/beyond_doubt
Don Rubin at York University, Toronto, http://oberonshakespearestudygroup.blogspot.com/2011/12/york-u-shakespeare-authorship_21.html
June 6, 2011 authorship debate with Wells, Edmondson, and Leahy,
http://oberonshakespearestudygroup.blogspot.com/2011/06/watch-june-6-2011-shakespeare.html
Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. http://www.shakespeare.org.uk/home.html
Stratford (Ontario) Shakespeare Festival, http://www.stratfordfestival.ca
Wells' review of Shahan's Shakespeare Beyond Doubt? Exposing an Industry in Denial,
http://interestingliterature.wordpress.com/2013/07/28/guest-blog-shakespeare-beyond-doubt/
Shakespeare Birthplace Trust's free booklet "Shakespeare Bites Back" reposte to authorship questions,
http://bloggingshakespeare.com/shakespeare-bites-back-the-book
Proving Shakespeare webinar with Marlovian anti-Strat Ros Barber,
http://bloggingshakespeare.com/webinars/proving-shakespeare
Shakespeare Beyond Doubt? Exposing an Industry in Denial edited by John Shahan and Alexander Waugh, https://doubtaboutwill.org/beyond_doubt
Don Rubin at York University, Toronto, http://oberonshakespearestudygroup.blogspot.com/2011/12/york-u-shakespeare-authorship_21.html
June 6, 2011 authorship debate with Wells, Edmondson, and Leahy,
http://oberonshakespearestudygroup.blogspot.com/2011/06/watch-june-6-2011-shakespeare.html
Comments
We should not be surprised or shocked at any of this. Utopia may be on the map of the world, but it is a very long way away!!! We need to gird our loins and be ready for battle.
Heward
http://hewardwilkinson.co.uk
We are herd animals and look to leaders of the herd to make sudden starts and turns when there is danger afoot. That Wells is over the hill as a thinker and Edmondson a lackey with considerable bile in his soul tells me this generation of scholars is not up to the challenge of doing more work and uniting fields of knowledge into a coherent uncontradictory theory on the question. They fail as leaders.
As you may recall, my essay on Wells was singled out for shameful notice by Edmondson in his puff piece for the Stratford book. Wells himself was faux-gracious in saying it was a very intelligent piece but of course he believed it was completely misguided and wrong. This is the English gentleman's use of the stiletto back of the handshake. The action unfortunately of an intellectual coward.
It is some small comfort that the wrong people do not support the present inquiry, indicating it has substance. I have found that by and large, most people now believe that the earth is a sphere and that it turns in the direction of a centralized star.
with best wishes,
William Ray
Helen H. Gordon, author of "The Secret Love Story in Shakespeare's Snnets [2008]