Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Sarah Siddons, theatre voices and recorded memory
- Playing with Shakespeare’s play: Branagh’s Love’s Labour’s Lost
- Bottom and the gramophone: Media, class and comedy in Michael Hoffman’s A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Maurice Evans’s Richard II on Stage, Television and (Almost) Film
- Richard II on the Screen
- ‘Where Lies Your Text?’: Twelfth Night in American Sign Language Translation
- ‘This uncivil and unjust extent against thy peace’: Tim supple’s Twelfth Night, or what violence will
- ‘There’s no such thing’: nothing and nakedness in Polanski’s Macbeth
- Ghosts and mirrors: the gaze in film Hamlets
- ‘Ben, it’s a terrible thing to hate your mother’: mind control in Hamlet and The Manchurian Candidate
- Channelling the ghosts: the Wooster Group’s remediation of the 1964 Electronovision Hamlet
- Listening to Prospero’s Books
- Lend Me Your Ears: Sampling BBC Radio Shakespeare
- An Age of Kings and The ‘Normal American’
- Shakespeare and British Television
- A Local Habitation and a Name: Television and Shakespeare
- Paying attention in Shakespeare parody: from Tom Stoppard to YouTube
- Madagascan will: cinematic Shakespeares / transnational exchanges
- Still life? Anthropocentrism and the fly in Titus Andronicus and Volpone
- Riddling q1: Hamlet’s mill and the trickster
- ‘Speak, that I may see thee’: Shakespeare characters and common words
- Who do the people love?
- A Partial Theory of Original Practice
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2007
- Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles, January–December 2006
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical studies
- 2 Shakespeare in performance
- 3a Editions and textual studies
- 3b Editions and textual studies: The RSC Complete Works
- Index to Volume 61
Who do the people love?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
- Frontmatter
- Sarah Siddons, theatre voices and recorded memory
- Playing with Shakespeare’s play: Branagh’s Love’s Labour’s Lost
- Bottom and the gramophone: Media, class and comedy in Michael Hoffman’s A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Maurice Evans’s Richard II on Stage, Television and (Almost) Film
- Richard II on the Screen
- ‘Where Lies Your Text?’: Twelfth Night in American Sign Language Translation
- ‘This uncivil and unjust extent against thy peace’: Tim supple’s Twelfth Night, or what violence will
- ‘There’s no such thing’: nothing and nakedness in Polanski’s Macbeth
- Ghosts and mirrors: the gaze in film Hamlets
- ‘Ben, it’s a terrible thing to hate your mother’: mind control in Hamlet and The Manchurian Candidate
- Channelling the ghosts: the Wooster Group’s remediation of the 1964 Electronovision Hamlet
- Listening to Prospero’s Books
- Lend Me Your Ears: Sampling BBC Radio Shakespeare
- An Age of Kings and The ‘Normal American’
- Shakespeare and British Television
- A Local Habitation and a Name: Television and Shakespeare
- Paying attention in Shakespeare parody: from Tom Stoppard to YouTube
- Madagascan will: cinematic Shakespeares / transnational exchanges
- Still life? Anthropocentrism and the fly in Titus Andronicus and Volpone
- Riddling q1: Hamlet’s mill and the trickster
- ‘Speak, that I may see thee’: Shakespeare characters and common words
- Who do the people love?
- A Partial Theory of Original Practice
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2007
- Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles, January–December 2006
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical studies
- 2 Shakespeare in performance
- 3a Editions and textual studies
- 3b Editions and textual studies: The RSC Complete Works
- Index to Volume 61
Summary
Not so long ago, within the memory of some professors emeriti yet living, a number of Shakespearian critics spent considerable time and energy in attempts to determine ‘what Shakespeare believed’ about some subject, which usually meant what they wanted him to believe, which always meant what they themselves believed. They had no trouble in demonstrating, by a judicious selection of supporting evidence from the plays, and a judicious avoidance of any evidence to the contrary, that he shared their views on art, family, friendship, honour, justice, love, marriage, nature, religion, revenge, sex, war and many other subjects. But they had a great deal of trouble with his view of politics, because they wanted him to believe in democracy but he obviously did not. He only gives us three extended treatments of ‘the people’ as a separate political entity and agency in the action – Jack Cade’s rebels in Act 4 of 2 Henry VI, and the Roman plebeians in the first three acts of Julius Caesar and of Coriolanus – and in all three plays they are presented as a ‘rabble’ who are mindless, fickle, easily swayed and murderous. Moreover, they are always shown to be wrong. Cade’s rebels set out to exterminate the middle and upper classes (hence their notorious proposal to ‘kill all the lawyers’) and establish an egalitarian utopia where food and claret wine are free and ‘all things shall be in common’, including wives, but finally, in one brief scene (4.8), they are persuaded by Clifford to yield to the King, and then by Cade to continue their rebellion, and then by Clifford to abandon Cade and go off to fight the French. The plebeians in Julius Caesarcheer Caesar at the Lupercalia, but after his assassination they are persuaded by Brutus to approve of the conspirators responsible for it, and then they are persuaded by Mark Antony to go on a violent rampage against them (during which they kill the wrong Cinna), and this results in civil war and the destruction of the Roman republic.
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- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 289 - 301Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008