You can judge a book by its cover 鈥 at least in this case. Rhodri Lewis鈥 sombre dust jacket reproduces some of the more gory sections of A Hunting Scene, painted by Piero di Cosimo about a century before the first performances of Shakespeare鈥檚 Hamlet. Lewis describes the image: 鈥渁n all but feral community of appetitive violence, with human beings competing against one another and the animals on whom they preyed鈥. Hamlet and the Vision of Darkness reads Shakespeare鈥檚 tragedy as a defiant rejection of the humanist aspirations of the early moderns: 鈥渨hile humanist educators stuck to their pious ideology in championing the light of self-knowledge, for the Shakespeare of Hamlet, humankind is bound in ignorance of itself鈥.
Lewis鈥 critical method is thorough and systematic. He cites chapter and verse of the various 鈥渁uctoritees鈥, authors of humanistic treatises on history, poetics, philosophy and hunting. With
diligence and patience, he traces these back to their classical sources. Then he shows how poorly Hamlet acts upon, articulates or personifies their principles. At points, this amounts to little more than character assassination: 鈥淗amlet emerges as a thinker of unrelenting superficiality, confusion, and pious self-deceit鈥 or 鈥渢he thoughts to which he gives voice are the ill-arranged and ill-digested harvest of his bookish education鈥. Occasionally, the attacks are cheap shots: 鈥淧rince Hamlet is the inhabitant of Elsinore most thoroughly mired in bullshit鈥 or, in a throwaway description of the Prince鈥檚 鈥淚f it be now, 鈥檛is not to come; if it be not to come it will be now鈥︹ speech, Lewis remarks that he utters 鈥減seudo-profundities worthy of Yoda鈥.
It is as though English drama鈥檚 most exciting hero is, for Lewis, flat, stale and unprofitable. Furthermore, in Lewis鈥 opinion, Shakespeare also disapproved of his own most complex and fascinating dramatic creation. Hamlet, Lewis argues, is a personification of all that is wrong with humanism鈥檚 conventional wisdoms 鈥 poetic, historical and philosophical. Why Shakespeare would go to the trouble of personifying his refutation of humanism is not explained; why he would do so in a play is even more mystifying. Might an audience, Elizabethan or modern, have the slightest idea that the plight of Renaissance drama鈥檚 greatest protagonist is nothing more than a caricature of the wisdom of the ancients?聽
Too often, Lewis鈥 trouncing of Hamlet originates with an ingenious but hair-splitting point. For instance, apropos Hamlet鈥檚 鈥淭here鈥檚 a special providence in the fall of a sparrow鈥, Lewis discusses the clash between Roman augury and biblical parables (with reference to the sparrows of Matthew x, 29-31). If, Lewis rightly maintains, Hamlet defies augury, he is defying 鈥渟omething that does not exist, and Christian providence makes it quite plain that the divinatory claims of pagan religion are an idolatrous sham. Either the Christian or the Roman view of the matter may be right; both views, likewise, might be wrong. But鈥hey cannot both be right.鈥 Fair enough, but Lewis lays into Hamlet as though this contradiction betrays the fact that the prince himself, and the humanist view he apparently represents, is some kind of fraud: 鈥淗abituated in the techniques of rhetorical bricolage, Hamlet will say anything that springs to mind, irrespective of its logical incoherence or indifference to truth.鈥
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But Hamlet is a fictional character and isn鈥檛 it just as likely that the playwright is making him plausible in the eyes of his audience? Aren鈥檛 characters (fictional as well as factual) contradictory or untruthful from time to time? One might as well argue that Bottom is flawed because human beings don鈥檛 turn into donkeys. A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream and Hamlet are plays, not zoological handbooks or humanist tracts. Lewis, however, remains aggrieved that Hamlet is 鈥渦ntroubled by his failure to make any sort of sense鈥, as though logical consistency trumps theatrical plausibility. (What a good job Lewis isn鈥檛 writing about Samuel Beckett!)
The problem is that Lewis writes about a play 鈥 a work of dramatic fiction 鈥 as though it were a sustained critique of an intellectual position and only that. Indeed, Hamlet鈥檚 alleged disdain for the theatre is something Lewis attacks: 鈥淸Hamlet] is uninterested in either the form or content of the plays he admires. Uninterested in the way they have been written鈥ninterested in staging, casting, or the dynamics of an acting company. Uninterested in the opinions of audience members who do not agree with him.鈥 Never mind that Hamlet writes new speeches for the players; never mind that he gives them notes regarding gesture or volume in the manner of a modern director, never mind that he defends their reputation in front of the censorious Polonius. It is neither Hamlet nor Shakespeare who is uninterested in theatre; it is Lewis.
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Shakespeare studies is a broad church, but the centrality of the play itself is the governing principle. Critics such as Michael Dobson, Andrew Gurr, Peter Holland, Jean E.鈥塇oward, Lois Potter, Tiffany Stern and Stanley Wells have shown us how the theatrical intercourse between actor and audience is an ineluctable part of our understanding of Shakespeare鈥檚 art. They are theatre historians, textual scholars, analysts of theatrical reception, historians of patronage and censorship, but there is no way round their prioritisation of the plays鈥 theatrical essence.
New historicist Shakespeareans (Stephen Greenblatt, Katharine Maus, Louis Adrian Montrose) are interested in the ways that the plays establish and promulgate the inequitable distribution of power in Elizabethan and Jacobean society, while cultural materialists (Catherine Belsey, Jonathan Dollimore, Lisa Jardine, Alan Sinfield) frequently prioritise the plays鈥 contemporary ideological force. Although new historicists would seek to question the canonical superiority of Shakespeare and although cultural materialists would point out that the elevation of Shakespeare as a venerated object has often been politically motivated, neither school would seek to undermine the centrality of the text under discussion. But in his suggestion that Hamlet is merely a theoretical vehicle for a negative assessment of humanist learning, Lewis prises apart an intellectual history from a performance or even a literary one and, in so doing, points us towards a bleak and hollow work of art: Hamlet, as it were, without the Prince.
He is on firmer ground when he critiques, politically, the humanist faith in providence as a strategy 鈥渢o diminish or deny the function of human agency in making things the way they are鈥 and he writes well on the political opportunism of Claudius and Fortinbras. There is an especially lively chapter on the etiquette of hunting and his scrupulous attention to the language of the play reveals specialist hunting terms that permeate it and underline its predatory obsessions.
But the book鈥檚 raison d鈥櫭猼re 鈥 鈥Hamlet indicates that [Shakespeare] came to find humanist moral philosophy deficient鈥 鈥 is only one tenuous way of accounting for the inconsistencies, flaws and logical lacunae that pepper the protagonist and the plot. Too frequently, the critical formulations are rebarbative: Fortinbras鈥 ambition is 鈥渁 contra-teleological something that is realised by the simple fact of being asserted, and to which a substantial desideratum is incidental鈥. Hamlet is enabled 鈥渢o pursue a fantasy of mnemonic erasure鈥. In places, Lewis sounds dangerously like the bewildered and bewildering philosopher, George, in Tom Stoppard鈥檚 play Jumpers: 鈥淯nless we define being alive as an affair of ontological passivity 鈥 as a condition of significance only because it involves one neither killing oneself nor being dead 鈥 it is not at all clear that choosing to live can only be seen as the equivalent of not doing something.鈥 Most bewilderingly, Claudius is 鈥渁 pretzel in a land of sponge cakes鈥 鈥 with tea or not with tea, that is the question!
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Peter J.鈥塖mith is reader in Renaissance literature at Nottingham Trent University. He has seen Hamlet more than 40 times and reviewed 20 different productions. He is co-editor (with Nigel Wood) of Hamlet: Theory in Practice (1996) and (with Deborah Cartmell) Much Ado About Nothing: A Critical Reader (蹿辞谤迟丑肠辞尘颈苍驳).听
Hamlet and the Vision of Darkness
By Rhodri Lewis
Princeton University Press 392pp, 拢32.95
ISBN 9780691166841
Published 8 November 2017

The author
Rhodri Lewis, professor of English literature (and fellow of St Hugh鈥檚 College) at the University of Oxford, was born in Haverfordwest, Wales, and had 鈥渞ather a peripatetic childhood鈥 before going on to read English at Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
Asked about how he has been influenced by Oxford, where he has spent his whole career to date, Lewis responds: 鈥淢y undergraduate tutor was Val Cunningham, and my recollections of being taught by him are that anything goes, as long as i) it聽has an argument; ii) the argument is not stupid or borrowed from someone else; iii) the argument does not do violence to the text or texts under discussion. I聽suppose this has had an impact on me.鈥
His new book has emerged from Lewis鈥 long-standing interest in 鈥渆arly聽modern ideas about cognition, in particular about memory鈥鈥檇 intended to explore the presence of these ideas in Shakespeare鈥檚 work 鈥 and perhaps to say something about Shakespeare鈥檚 criticisms of them. As I聽began writing, it became apparent that I聽was coming back to Hamlet over and over again, and that some of my readings did not sit at all easily with the sorts of things that are generally thought about the play. So, Hamlet it was.鈥
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As for the general state of 鈥淪hakespeare studies鈥 today, Lewis believes that 鈥渕uch of the best work on Shakespeare at the moment concentrates on questions of performance history, on questions of reception and cultural appropriation, or 鈥 on a different tack 鈥 seeks to grind his writings into a lens through which to view the history of x in the late 16th and early 17th centuries鈥t聽would be good to see more work treating, and attempting to make sense of, Shakespeare鈥檚 poems and plays as artistic wholes. As I聽found to聽my own slight surprise in tackling Hamlet, there鈥檚 still a lot to say.鈥
Matthew Reisz
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽More twists than a pretzel
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