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Words of Power: Reading Shakespeare and the Bible, by Jem Bloomfield

Seeking a deep conversation between Scripture and the Bard鈥檚 works is a fool鈥檚 errand, argues Peter J. Smith

Published on
August 25, 2016
Last updated
August 25, 2016
Actors performing in William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night
Source: Jordan Green

In Twelfth Night, before his tormentors realise that the imprisoned Malvolio is unable to see them, they get the professional fool, Feste, to dress as a priest in order to vex their prisoner with theological and philosophical riddles. As he assumes his disguise, Feste wearily remarks of his cassock, 鈥淲ell, I鈥檒l put it on, and I will dissemble myself in鈥檛, and I would I were the first that ever dissembled in such a gown.鈥 Feste鈥檚 disdain for the histrionic trappings of organised religion demonstrates a rift between Shakespeare鈥檚 bracing agnosticism and Elizabethan religious orthodoxy. The hypocritical pieties of Measure for Measure or the bumbling ineptitude of Friars Laurence and John in Romeo and Juliet, the Machiavellian Ely and Canterbury in Henry V or the revolting sanctimony of Christian 鈥渏ustice鈥 that enforces Shylock鈥檚 agonised conversion at the end of The Merchant of Venice 鈥 all look back to Chaucer鈥檚 anti-ecclesiastical satire and forward to William Blake鈥檚 sacerdotal contempt.

Shakespeare鈥檚 scepticism towards the institutions of religious observance is hardly surprising, given the bloodbath that surrounded him as the wrecking ball of Catholic/Protestant compliance swung to and fro, levelling, like the scythe of Andrew Marvell鈥檚 Civil War mower (only four decades later), everything in its path. Indeed, it would be surprising if such a humane and curious intelligence were able to conform cosily to one or other belligerent orthodoxy.

While Jem Bloomfield is undeniably right to insist on the similarity of the canonical status of both the Bible and Shakespeare鈥檚 First Folio, the lacuna that runs down the middle of Words of Power testifies to the gulf between the sacredness of the Holy Scriptures and the ways in which institutionalised religion stifles the creativity and humanity epitomised by Shakespeare鈥檚 works. Bloomfield鈥檚 effort to demonstrate how similar are the Bible and Shakespeare overlooks this fundamental separation. Biblical exegesis and literary criticism are, of course, a bit like each other, but their resemblance is superficial. This explains the typical structure of Bloomfield鈥檚 chapters 鈥 separate sections on the Bible and Shakespeare that glance past each other but never converse; they provide 鈥減arallel suspicions鈥 and run 鈥渁longside each other鈥.

Indeed, Bloomfield asserts that ways of reading the Bible have 鈥渂een shaped by the aims and assumptions of that project鈥 and have little to do with other kinds of reading, including (unfortunately for him) Shakespeare. Much of the material here is to do with the hair-splitting of exegetical wrangles and the contested canonicity of various Scriptures, but these have nothing to do with Shakespeare: 鈥渢he emergent Rabbinic movement鈥mphasised the Hebrew versions of the Scriptures over the Septuagint鈥 and so on. Contrariwise, Bloomfield鈥檚 concise accounts of, say, New Criticism or performance studies never so much as mention the Bible.

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Although this book鈥檚 subtitle implies a connection between reading Shakespeare and reading the Bible, the case for their concatenation is never persuasively made, nor, given Shakespeare鈥檚 manifest heterodoxy, could it ever be. Shakespeare鈥檚 apotheosis is only ever figurative or, in the case of George Bernard Shaw, derogatory. The Shavian term 鈥淏ardolatry鈥 illustrates the vainglory of investing the Folio with a sacred essence, and it also underlines the absurdity of a belief system that serves to limit the playwright鈥檚 imaginative expansiveness.

Peter J. Smith is reader in Renaissance literature, Nottingham Trent University, and a trustee of the British Shakespeare Association.

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Words of Power: Reading Shakespeare and the Bible
By Jem Bloomfield
Lutterworth Press, 176pp, 拢20.00
ISBN 9780718894139
Published 26 May 2016

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