National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William Shakespeare

This essay contextualises Shakespeare as product of a field of forces encapsulating national identity and relative cultural status. It begins by historicising the production of national poets in Romantic and Nationalist terms. Lefevere’s conceptual grid is then used to characterise the system that u...

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Main Author: Paul Innes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2016-04-01
Series:Multicultural Shakespeare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/szekspir/article/view/7685
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spelling doaj-9ad93a3fa2eb4022a496a41b7146fd412021-09-02T09:12:53ZengLodz University PressMulticultural Shakespeare2300-76052016-04-011328355010.1515/mstap-2016-00047685National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William ShakespearePaul Innes0University of GloucestershireThis essay contextualises Shakespeare as product of a field of forces encapsulating national identity and relative cultural status. It begins by historicising the production of national poets in Romantic and Nationalist terms. Lefevere’s conceptual grid is then used to characterise the system that underpins the production of Shakespeare as British national poet, and his place within the canon of world literature. The article defines this context first before moving onto the figure of Shakespeare, by referring to various high status texts such as the Kalevala, the Aeneid, The Faerie Queene and Paradise Lost. The position accorded Shakespeare at the apex is therefore contingent upon a series of prior operations on other texts, and their writers. Shakespeare is not conceived as attaining pre-eminence because of his own innate literary qualities. Rather, a process of elimination occurs by which the common ascription of the position of national poet to a writer of epic is shown to be a cultural impossibility for the British. Instead, via Aristotle’s privileging of tragedy over epic, the rise of Shakespeare is seen as almost a second choice because of the inappropriateness of Spenser and Milton for the position.https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/szekspir/article/view/7685shakespearenational poetscomparative literatureromanticismnationalismconceptual gridempire
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Innes
spellingShingle Paul Innes
National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William Shakespeare
Multicultural Shakespeare
shakespeare
national poets
comparative literature
romanticism
nationalism
conceptual grid
empire
author_facet Paul Innes
author_sort Paul Innes
title National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William Shakespeare
title_short National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William Shakespeare
title_full National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William Shakespeare
title_fullStr National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William Shakespeare
title_full_unstemmed National Poets, the Status of the Epic and the Strange Case of Master William Shakespeare
title_sort national poets, the status of the epic and the strange case of master william shakespeare
publisher Lodz University Press
series Multicultural Shakespeare
issn 2300-7605
publishDate 2016-04-01
description This essay contextualises Shakespeare as product of a field of forces encapsulating national identity and relative cultural status. It begins by historicising the production of national poets in Romantic and Nationalist terms. Lefevere’s conceptual grid is then used to characterise the system that underpins the production of Shakespeare as British national poet, and his place within the canon of world literature. The article defines this context first before moving onto the figure of Shakespeare, by referring to various high status texts such as the Kalevala, the Aeneid, The Faerie Queene and Paradise Lost. The position accorded Shakespeare at the apex is therefore contingent upon a series of prior operations on other texts, and their writers. Shakespeare is not conceived as attaining pre-eminence because of his own innate literary qualities. Rather, a process of elimination occurs by which the common ascription of the position of national poet to a writer of epic is shown to be a cultural impossibility for the British. Instead, via Aristotle’s privileging of tragedy over epic, the rise of Shakespeare is seen as almost a second choice because of the inappropriateness of Spenser and Milton for the position.
topic shakespeare
national poets
comparative literature
romanticism
nationalism
conceptual grid
empire
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/szekspir/article/view/7685
work_keys_str_mv AT paulinnes nationalpoetsthestatusoftheepicandthestrangecaseofmasterwilliamshakespeare
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