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SHAKSPER 2001: Re: Shakespeare and Protestant Historiography
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@ws.bowiestate.edu) Date: 07/20/01
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 12.1827 Friday, 20 July 2001 From: Takashi Kozuka <shaxpeare@hotmail.com> Date: Thursday, 19 Jul 2001 16:31:03 Subject: Re: Shakespeare and Protestant Historiography Jack Heller writes: >This [Gary Taylor's] article predates Richard Wilson's identification of >Shakespeare with the "Shakeshafte" in E. Campion's associates. Many people misunderstand the role of Richard Wilson in the development of the Lancastrian theories. (I'm not saying that Jack does, as I don't know it.) Neither Taylor nor Wilson was the first scholar who linked the "Shakeshafte" in Alexander Houghton's 1581 will and Shakespeare. The link between them has a long history, as a chapter in my dissertation (PhD thesis) demonstrates. In his TLC article (1997), Wilson pushed the theories one step further by arguing that Shakespeare was recruited by Campion, that they went to Houghton Tower (although, as Peter Milward commented, Houghton Tower was not the residence of Alexander Houghton), and that Shakespeare gave up his old faith and became a poet after Campion was arrested and executed. As Katherine Duncan-Jones mentioned, we have two separate issues (though they can be linked, as the Lancastrians have done): whether or not the "Shakeshafte" was Shakespeare; and whether or not Shakespeare was a Catholic. In addition, we must be careful when we use such terms as recusants, papists, Catholics, Jesuits, etc. At our forthcoming conference (22-23 September) Wilson will give a lecture entitled "'Secret as a Dumb Man': Shakespeare's Silence". We'll have lectures on Shakespeare, Marlowe and Jonson by distinguished scholars. If you would like to attend the conference, you can print out the booking form off our website (please highlight the booking form before printing it out!): http://www.warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/ren/new_directions.htm Alternatively, you can e-mail me at t.kozuka@warwick.ac.uk Best wishes, Takashi Kozuka PS In his TLS article Wilson used the modern spelling "Hoghton". In this posting (as in my dissertation) I used the 16th-century spelling "Houghton". _______________________________________________________________ S H A K S P E R: The Global Shakespeare Discussion List Hardy M. Cook, editor@ws.bowiestate.edu The S H A K S P E R Webpage <http://ws.bowiestate.edu>
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