A study has claimed that the Bard himself may have used elements of聽university productions in聽his work.
A new book has traced some of聽William Shakespeare鈥檚 most famous characters 鈥 including Hamlet and Macbeth 鈥 back to聽their roots in聽student plays, which may also have helped the playwright 鈥 who did聽not go聽to university 鈥 shape his depictions of聽academic life.
Such plays in the 16th and 17th centuries were controversial and provoked debate on issues around gender, identity, propriety, morals and theatrical spectacle, explained Daniel Blank, an assistant professor in early modern literature at Durham University.
His book, Shakespeare and University Drama in Early Modern England, published on 2聽March, aims to tell a lesser known part of Shakespeare鈥檚 history and to demonstrate that the playwright鈥檚 own lack of a university education did not mean that he had no knowledge of academe.
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鈥淪tudent theatre and the controversy around it offered Shakespeare a window into the world of universities, which he seized upon,鈥 Dr Blank said.
鈥淪hakespeare used this to inspire some of his most famous characters, such as Hamlet and Macbeth, and to shape depictions of academic culture in some of his works.
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鈥淚t is a fascinating insight into Shakespeare鈥檚 interest in and engagement with university life.鈥
An example highlighted by the book concerns a play performed at Oxford in 1592 that 鈥渃ritiqued and mocked the insularity of the university鈥.
William Gager鈥檚 Hippolytus caricatured the anti-theatricalism movement that opposed theatre on moral and religious grounds, Dr Blank explained.
鈥淪hakespeare鈥檚 most famous student, Hamlet, displays the same prejudices, which he learned as a university student at Wittenberg,鈥 he added.
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鈥淏y considering Hamlet in relation to Hippolytus, we can see how famous scenes like Hamlet鈥檚 interactions with Ophelia and with the acting troupe that visits Elsinore were shaped by, and engage with, contemporary debates about student theatre and the morality of performance.鈥
Dr Blank also highlights a connection between Macbeth and Tres Sibyllae, a short play that was performed before King James聽I when he visited Oxford in 1605.
His archival research has also highlighted various other parallels between work performed by Oxford and Cambridge students and the plays written by Shakespeare, which, he says, illustrate 鈥渢he playwright鈥檚 awareness and engagement with these student productions鈥.
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