糖心Vlog

Scholars feud over Shakespeare co-authorship

Traditional literary approaches meet the latest stylometric analysis in determining who wrote the Bard鈥檚 plays

Published on
December 15, 2017
Last updated
December 20, 2017
Source: istock
Scholars argue fiercely about how many of the familar plays were co-authored

A leading scholar has called for the creation of a Committee for the Protection of Shakespeare鈥檚 Text.

published earlier this year, claims that 17 of the 44 plays were in fact written collaboratively. Last month, the editors were confronted by their critics at which by all accounts became acrimonious.

Now veteran Shakespearean Sir Brian Vickers, a distinguished senior fellow at the University of London鈥檚 Institute for Advanced Study, has written an open letter to colleagues describing 鈥減ublication of The New Oxford Shakespeare as a crisis for our discipline鈥, since 鈥渁 small group of scholars鈥ave been able to apply new and untested 鈥 that is, by anyone outside the NOS circle 鈥 stylometric approaches which have resulted in their edition containing 鈥38 per cent less鈥 of Shakespeare鈥檚 text, that proportion now attributed to [Christopher] Marlowe, [Thomas] Middleton and others鈥.

When Gary Taylor, general editor of The New Oxford Shakespeare, referred to 鈥渃omputerised textual analysis鈥, Sir Brian went on, it was 鈥渁 phrase that strikes fear into the hearts of many scholars in Shakespeare studies who lack sufficient mathematical knowledge to evaluate the claims鈥et those of us familiar with traditional authorship attribution studies have failed鈥, for example, 鈥渢o find any evidence of [Christopher] Marlowe鈥檚 hand in either the language or the prosody of the Henry VI 辫濒补测蝉鈥.

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It was this that spurred Sir Brian to embark on 鈥渁 worldwide investigation into the methods used to dilute the Shakespeare canon. I plan to set up a Committee for the Protection of Shakespeare鈥檚 Text鈥 that would 鈥渋nvite evaluations from a wide range of independent scholars鈥. He also produced a satirical poster titled 鈥淭he New Oxford Shakespeare-Lite鈥, advertising an edition where 鈥淲e bring you the texts with 38% Less Shakespeare!!!鈥

Contacted by 糖心Vlog, Sir Brian said that he had been 鈥渨orking on authorship attribution for 20 years now鈥 and noted that 鈥渢he collaborators in the five accepted co-authored [Shakespeare] plays were identified between 1850 and 1920鈥. 鈥淪hockingly,鈥 he went on, 鈥渢he NOS attributionists have ignored objective features of Shakespeare鈥檚 language that anyone can verify and any other type of non-mathematical evidence鈥. His proposed committee was designed to 鈥渆xplore the assumptions and methods of their experts, because I and several others do not accept their results鈥.

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Asked to comment, Gabriel Egan, professor of Shakespeare studies at De Montfort University (and one of the scholars leading The New Oxford Shakespeare project), responded that 鈥The New Oxford Shakespeare is made by scholars who teach and celebrate Shakespeare鈥檚 achievement and don鈥檛 think it is diminished by his collaboration with other writers 鈥 quite the opposite. At the time, Brian Vickers was appalled by the 1986-87 Oxford Shakespeare claiming that Shakespeare repeatedly co-authored plays, but 15 years later he accepted the fact and published his book Shakespeare, Co-Author.

鈥淰ickers is now appalled again by The New Oxford Shakespeare finding more evidence for collaboration. He does not dispute that Shakespeare wrote very little of Henry VI, Part One and very little of Edward III. Vickers prefers Thomas Kyd, rather than Christopher Marlowe, as Shakespeare鈥檚 collaborator. How does it 鈥榩reserve Shakespeare鈥檚 reputation鈥 to have him write with one playwright rather than another?

鈥淲e predict that Vickers will get over this new shock as he did the last one.鈥

matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com

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