Jump to content
Celebrity Gossip & Lifestyle Magazine

Shakespeare’s Wife By Germaine Greer

15 August 2007

Rate this article

0Comments | Comment on this Article

A ground-breaking, controversial new biography of Anne Hathaway which presents a fascinating social history of Shakespeare's life and times.Shakespeare’s Wife is set to be Germaine Greer’s most contentious work since The Female Eunuch• Making use of exhaustive first-hand research and combining literary-historical techniques with extensive documentary evidence, Greer presents a contentious, yet convincingly argued set of hypotheses about the wife of William Shakespeare• Greer’s findings, and the new light they shed on Anne Hathaway’s life, call in to question the established perception of this little-known individual and provide fascinating insights into the life and times of our greatest poet and playwrightLittle is known of the wife of England’s greatest playwright; a great deal, none of it complimentary, has been assumed. The omission of her name from Shakespeare’s will has been interpreted as evidence that she was nothing more than an unfortunate mistake from which Shakespeare did well to distance himself. Yet Shakespeare is above all the poet of marriage. Before Shakespeare there were few comedies or tragedies of wooing and wedding. Tragedies were not about loving 'not wisely but too well' but about the fall of illustrious men. Comedies were not about the pitfalls that lay in wait along the path of true love but about getting away with adultery. Again and again in Shakespeare’s plays constant wives redeem unjust and deluded husbands, but scholars persist in believing that Shakespeare’s own wife was no help to him and even that he hated her.

Social historians have avoided becoming embroiled in the Shakespeare industry and Shakespearean scholars have steered clear of social history. In Shakespeare’s Wife Germaine Greer combines literary-historical techniques with documentary evidence about life in Stratford, striving to re-embed the story of Shakespeare’s marriage in its social context. Her book presents a new and more fruitful set of hypotheses about the life and career of the farmer’s daughter who married our greatest poet. Though the suggestions made in this book are certainly daring, against such a carefully researched background they appear less improbable than the prejudices so freely expressed by Shakespearean scholars. Shakespeare’s Wife is a compelling, insightful book that already goes some way to right the wrongs done to Anne Shakespeare. Greer steps off the well-trodden paths of orthodoxy, asks new questions and opens new fields of investigation and research.

Germaine Greer gained her PhD from the University of Cambridge in 1967 with a thesis on Shakespeare's early comedies and has taught Shakespeare at universities in Australia, Britain and the US. In 1986 she was invited to contribute the volume on Shakespeare to the prestigious Past Masters series. She lives on three acres in north-west Essex, with two dogs, thirteen geese and a fluctuating number of doves.

Shakespeare’s Wife

0Comments | Be the first to comment!

Advertisement