Russ McDonald, ed. Shakespeare: An Anthology
of Criticism and Theory 1945-2000. Malden, MA, and Oxford:
Blackwell, 2004. 930pp. ISBN-13: 9780631234883
J. Gavin Paul
University of British Columbia
jgpaul@interchange.ubc.ca
J. Gavin Paul. "Review of Russ McDonald, ed. Shakespeare: An Anthology of Criticism and Theory 1945-2000."Early Modern Literary Studies 13.3 (January, 2008) 7.1-6<URL: http://purl.oclc.org/emls/13-3/revanth.htm>.
-
Russ McDonald's goal in crafting this anthology
of post-WW II Shakespeare studies is straightforward and ambitious:
to provide "a comprehensive yet handy record of that era, a
means of surveying the scholarship, interpretation, and theory
that burgeoned during a period of exceptional industry and rapid
change in the Anglo-American academy" (x). Forty-nine essays -- the
earliest being E. M. W. Tillyard's "The Cosmic Background" (1944)-are
divided into fourteen "arbitrary" (xii) categories, including
New Criticism, Psychoanalytic Criticism, Materialist Criticism,
Historicism and New Historicism, Textual Criticism and Bibliography,
and Postcolonial Shakespeare.
-
Although the selections themselves surely matter
more than the headings they are placed under, it is difficult
to argue with the divisions that McDonald implements-among other
choices, he incisively differentiates between Feminist Criticism
and Studies in Gender and Sexuality, and discounts (quite rightly,
I think) Deconstruction as necessitating a separate section
in a collection of Shakespearean criticism. If there is an anomalous
category, it is the anthology's first, on Authorship; this is
the only section to include just one essay, and the piece by
Samuel Schoenbaum on "Looney and the Oxfordians," while eloquent
and amusing, sets a curious tone in that it provides a conspicuously
tangential engagement with its rubric. Schoenbaum's work on
matters related to biography is monumental, but the Oxfordian/Stratfordian
authorship debate is a strange spectre to raise amongst selections
that are otherwise much more critically and theoretically rigorous;
McDonald, to his credit, directs readers to other sections (new
historicism and cultural materialism) for more complicated formulations
of authorship existing within "a network of political, commercial,
literary, religious, and other cultural affiliations" (2). As
for the classifications of the remainder of the essays, it hardly
seems fruitful to quibble, since McDonald intends his categories
to be understood as permeable: "every species of critical thinking,
no matter how distinctive it may seem, is implicated with many
others" (xiii).
-
In the interests of variety and representative
sampling, McDonald imposes a limit of one item per writer, and
also makes "[an] effort . . . to attend to as many plays as
possible with as little overlap as possible" (xi). When these
welcome strategies are combined with the fact that McDonald
organizes the anthology by methodology rather than by following
a strict chronology, the result is a truly diverse collection
that allows for disparate voices to be juxtaposed in revealing
ways. Tillyard's essay, for example, is followed immediately
by Greenblatt's "Invisible Bullets." The section on Performance
Criticism ranges from what is essentially theatre history -- Gerald
Eades Bentley's "Shakespeare and the Blackfriars Theatre"-to
the revolutionary work of J. L. Styan, to W. B. Worthen's theoretical
reassessments of what has come before ("Deeper Meanings and
Theatrical Technique: The Rhetoric of Performance Criticism").
-
The reprinted essays provide the anthology
with its bulk and do all of the heavy lifting, but the book's
greatest strength are the interstitial contributions of McDonald
himself, brief three or four page introductions to each section
of material. McDonald concedes that "[m]any users of this book
will prefer to skip the introductory matter and get onto what
they came for, the essays themselves" (xiii), but to do so would
be a mistake. With concise, accessible, and even-handed summaries,
McDonald demonstrates a remarkable ability to maintain a firm
grasp on the shifting critical landscapes of the past fifty
or so years. Best of all, McDonald extends his discussions well
beyond the boundaries of Shakespeare studies; in outlining developments
in textual criticism, for example, he remarks that "the literary
critic's move away from the work of art as a coherent, self-contained
unit towards an emphasis on fissure and multivocality finds
its parallel in the bibliographer's abandonment of an ideal
text in favor of collaborative production and multiple versions"
(268).
-
The compilation's one shortcoming is its lack
of a bibliography or bibliographies that would provide a list
of further reading for each of the fourteen categories that
McDonald has demarcated. McDonald suggests that such lists can
be reconstituted from the footnotes and bibliographies of the
individual essays (xi), but such an endeavour on the reader's
part would not always result in an expansion of one's reading
horizons. Of the thirteen texts referenced by Gary Taylor in
notes to his 1987 essay, "Revising Shakespeare," for instance,
six of them refer to other works written (or co-written) by
Taylor himself. I point this out not to slight Taylor, but to
suggest that the absence of further reading lists from McDonald's
anthology potentially undermines his aim of fostering "critical
perspective" (xi). McDonald does attempt to mention possibilities
for further reading as he introduces each group of essays, but
these passing references are far from comprehensive.
-
As with any anthology, it is always interesting
to see to whom the editor gives the last word. In this case,
the final essay is Patricia Parker's "Transfigurations: Shakespeare
and Rhetoric," which models a style of close reading that forges
connections not just between Shakespeare's plays but between
the plays and their contemporary rhetorical contexts. Parker's
essay (and thus the anthology) ends by looking forward: ". .
. we need to pay attention to the exploitation of the terms
and structures of rhetoric, in ways which would lead into the
figurative logic shaping both lines and scenes, and from the
plays themselves into the order of discourse and discourse of
order they both echo and turn on itself" (905). This conclusion
is fitting, as it reminds readers that at the core of even the
most sophisticated of interpretive procedures are the works
themselves -- the "lines and scenes" that are able to sustain a
disparate range of critical extrapolations and manoeuvres. The
collection as a whole echoes this spirit. For students, the
anthology will serve as an extraordinary map with which to navigate
vast fields of criticism that even specialists can find daunting;
and for those specialists, McDonald's collection will stand
as a rich and provocative record of the recent critical past.