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8 - Shakespeare’s comedies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2011

Margreta De Grazia
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
Stanley Wells
Affiliation:
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
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Summary

When the compilers of the First Folio, published in 1623, came to decide on the order in which they would print the plays, they divided them into Comedies, Histories and Tragedies. It was a bad idea. Comedy and tragedy refer to the forms of plays, history to their content. One of Shakespeare's history plays, Henry V, which sees obstacles overcome and ends with the promise of the marriage of its main character, approximates to comedy in its form. Others, such as Richard II and Richard III, are tragic in form and effect. Most of the histories make extensive use of invented material: the two parts of Henry IV include some of Shakespeare's greatest comic scenes, especially those featuring the unhistorical Sir John Falstaff. Moreover both British and Roman history lie behind some of the plays classed as tragedies, such as King Lear and Macbeth, Julius Caesar and Coriolanus.

Shakespeare's was an eclectic genius which refused to stay within the limits of traditional forms. He was a professional, writing for a popular theatre which welcomed variety of effect within plays. None of his tragedies, even King Lear, is without comedy; none of his comedies, even The Comedy of Errors or The Taming of the Shrew, lacks serious elements. And as the principal resident dramatist of the Lord Chamberlain's, later King's, Men from their founding in 1594 to the end of his career in 1613, he acknowledged a duty - which was also an invaluable stimulus to invention - to ring the changes in the nature of the plays that he contributed to the repertoire, constantly experimenting in content and form, never producing a steady, consecutively written sequence of plays in a single genre.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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