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Straight Acting

The Hidden Queer Lives of William Shakespeare

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A dazzling and "highly readable" (Guardian) portrait of Shakespeare as a young artist, revealing how his rich and complex queer life informed the plays and poems we treasure today
“Was Shakespeare gay?” For years the question has sent experts and fans into a tailspin of confusion. But as scholar Will Tosh argues, this debate misses the point: sex, intimacy, and identity in Elizabethan England were infinitely more complex—and queer—than we have been taught.
 
In this incisive biography, Tosh reveals William Shakespeare as a queer artist who drew on his society’s nuanced understanding of gender and sexuality to create some of English literature’s richest works. During Shakespeare’s time, same-sex desire was repressed and punished by the Church and state, but it was also articulated and sustained by institutions across England. Moving through the queer spaces of Shakespeare’s life—his Stratford schoolroom, smoky London taverns and playhouses, the royal court—Tosh shows how strongly Shakespeare’s early work was influenced by the queer culture of the time, much of it totally integrated into mainstream society. He also uncovers the surprising reason why Shakespeare veered away from his early work’s gender-bending homoeroticism.
 
Offering a subversive sketch of Elizabethan England, Straight Acting uncovers Shakespeare as one of history’s great queer artists and completely reshapes the way we understand his life and times.
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    • Kirkus

      July 15, 2024
      Was Shakespeare queer? A researcher makes the case. Tosh, head of research at Shakespeare's Globe, insists that the Bard was "a queer artist who drew on his society's complex understanding of same-sex desire to create some of the richest relationships in literature." Tosh, who uses the termqueer because it "encapsulates far more than it excludes," bemoans the determination of others "to scrub away any signs of homoeroticism" in Shakespeare's work, from the sanitizing of relationships like that of Romeo and Mercutio inRomeo and Juliet to the "pathbreaking sonnets of queer desire" that are often read aloud at opposite-sex weddings, "dusted off, de-queered and put to safely straight use." The author presents a vigorous argument for Shakespeare as "one of our most prolific poets of queer love." He charts his subject's maturation as an artist, from his upbringing to his literary apprenticeship in London, "the default capital of homoerotic desire," to the influence of such figures as the "sexy iconoclast" Christopher Marlowe, whoseEdward II, "a study of queer kingship," had "a transformative effect on the way Shakespeare wrote history plays" and gave Shakespeare "a queer dramaturgy that took seriously the range of ways in which a person might love." Speculative vignettes at the beginning of each chapter that muse upon Shakespeare's "artistic evolution" add little, and Tosh tries too hard to be poetic ("The people in a young man's life were lacquered with a sort of pious sealant") and funny (The Affectionate Shepherd, a work of romantic literature, was a "supersized" version of Virgil's secondEclogue, "in every respect bigger, longer and uncut"). Still, this is a lively analysis of Shakespeare's life and work, with close readings of his plays and claims that will likely spark fresh debate. A thoughtful portrait of Shakespeare's sexuality and its effect on his literary output.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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