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Shakespeare's Money: How much did he make and what did this mean?

Autor Robert Bearman
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 apr 2016
There is no doubting Shakespeare's literary genius, immortalised in his published work. However, statements along these lines are frequently followed by laments of how little is known about this life. This is true if we wish to know about Shakespeare's movements on even a month-by-month basis, or about his working practices and relationships with his theatrical fellows. However, too great an emphasis on this dearth of material not only leads to ill-informed comment that this is somehow 'suspicious' but also tends to downgrade the importance of what material has survived, often dismissed instead simply as evidence of his business dealings which have little bearing on his creative work. However, this material does at least help us to evaluate how successful Shakespeare was in earning a living in a profession which, in his day, was far from mainstream. By calculating his income from theatrical sources and exploring how this affected his financial circumstances and his ability to invest for his and his family's security, we can come to a better understanding of his social standing at different periods in his life, the most obvious evidence to his late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century contemporaries of his success. Shakespeare undoubtedly died a man of comfortable means, but, as this book demonstrates, there is little to justify claims that he died possessed of great wealth. The circumstances of his daughters' marriages are a sufficient indication that he had not achieved true gentlemanly status. Other evidence suggests that he had not broken convincingly into the ranks of leading figures even of a small market town. Moreover, following a period of increasing prosperity, these 'business records' also reflect a declining income during the last ten years or so of his life and of his efforts to safeguard his assets. On the other hand, when compared with his father's business failure, mainly the result of a loss of credit, it is clear that, consciously or unconsciously, Shakespeare had the good sense or foresight not to over-reach himself.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780198759249
ISBN-10: 019875924X
Pagini: 210
Ilustrații: 7 black-and-white halftones
Dimensiuni: 141 x 222 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

In this sober, careful, and ruthlessly factual little book Robert Bearman provides a low-keyed but devastating correction to a great deal of airy assertion and sloppy scholarship produced by Shakespeare's biographers, ancient and modern. Bearman politely makes his case without naming the scholars he is correcting, but the urbanity of his performance does not detract from its potency ... This book offers a closely reasoned analysis of such hard data as exists and its conclusions will be difficult to dispute. Future biographers will ignore it at their peril.
scrupulous and comprehensive ... illuminating ...
an absorbing portrait of Shakespeare's financial life
thought-provoking study ... a valuable resource for scholars.
Analyzing them with meticulous care and sober impartiality ... Bearman is able to shed considerable light

Notă biografică

Bob Bearman was formerly Head of Archives and Local Studies at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. He has been General Editor of the Publications of the Dugdale Society since 2002.