Sunday, March 30, 2008

Christies - rare books and roaring debates

I've had a few days to marinate on our Christies visit. I was so excited to go mostly because I have seen Christies portrayed in so many movies. It's always viewed as this mythic place - filled with artifacts and treasures. It is that, of course, but it's also a place to separate 'the men from the boys'.

The people who go to Christies are people of status - as we've discussed. That lead to my asking the question "do you need an invitation to come to an auction?" and when the answer was that Christies' auctions were all open to the public, I was quite shocked. It seemed so counter intuitive to me. Isn't Christies where the intelligent and rich and esteemed people come to flex their muscles and satisfy their appetites for their preferred curiosities? Why would some 'normal' person come inside?

This point of view, I suppose, fuels the legend that is Christies. It feels so unattainable. But, it looked no different from any of the prestigious libraries and places we've visited thus far. And those places don't feel unattainable at all - they are places of education and as such give off an open feeling. Maybe that's what separates Christies - it's not an educational atmosphere as much as a financial one. A rich one.

All in all - I loved going to Christies because it gave me a chance to see a landmark in New York that I've long wanted to see. The rare book collection was great to see - that inscribed printing of A Christmas Carol was spectacular. But I really took in what everyone was saying about Christies in terms of the sheer amount of dollars that pass through it and the unethical aspects of it. I really had never thought about that previously. I just thought the whole thing was pretty kick ass. I now see all sides of the argument - and it's complicated. Really complicated.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Nerd Alert

Without betraying too much of my nerdiness, I thought I might point out a fun little detail from the John Adams miniseries now showing on HBO. From the book American Shakespearean Criticism, reprinted in our reader:

"A number of the leaders of the Revolution owned copies of Shakespeare. ... At least three signers of the Declaration of Independence, John Adams, Francis Hopkinson, and John Penn, owned copies." (Westfall 38)

A quick google search turned up John Adams' personal library catalogued online at johnadamslibrary.org, which is actually a pretty neat site. Sure enough, Adams owned two separate printings of Shakespeare's complete works, one from 1748 and the other printed in 1761, which contains "the author's life; a glossary; and copious indexes."

All of which leads one to believe that the people who worked on this HBO production, especially the set designers, did their homework (via David McCullough) when they chose to hang the framed Droeshout engraving of the bard from the frontispiece of the First Folio on a wall in the Adams home in Boston. 

It's hard to spot; I had to rewind to make sure I wasn't seeing things. But he was there! Hanging on the wall before someone slammed the door, walked out, or something similar. Now whether Adams actually owned a copy of the engraving is more of a stretch, but I was pleased by the inclusion of such a tiny detail, anyway.

The image in question:
 

Thursday, March 20, 2008

This is Rafe Esquith

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TF3fn_Bm3I

Get this . . . in my research I found his email . . . I emailed him . . . and he called me back! I am going to have a phone interview with him next week!

I'm so moved by this guy, I think I might do my project on him instead.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Several Items

I thought I'd upload this article I read for an anthropology class last semester. It addresses the myth of the "universality" of Shakespeare, something that I certainly encountered in high school but was surprised to learn in some of our readings that said notion of thought has since been challenged and rather died out. Anyway, although the article itself is a bit dated (I think the author penned this in the 50's?) it is very interesting. As an English anthropologist studying the lives of the Bushmen of Africa, she attempts to explain the story of Hamlet to several elders and receives some very unexpected reactions. I've uploaded the article in .pdf format to Mediafire, if anyone's so inclined: http://www.mediafire.com/?wz1jf9bhdzj. Hopefully that works for you all.

Also, I thought I'd throw my two cents in regarding the little defamation scandal we experienced earlier in the week (which was quite amusing, actually). Here is a direct quote from the Shakespeare Fellowship website:

"The goals of the Fellowship include bringing the Shakespeare authorship debate to a world-wide audience via the Internet and stimulating a wide-ranging dialogue on the relevance of Shakespeare to the 21st century."

It is interesting then that apparently in order to take part in this "stimulating" discussion with members of the Fellowship, one must be a card-carrying member of the Oxfordian theory. Hmm!

The Morgan Library & Museaum

So, who else was floored by the photo exhibit at the end of the tour?! Elliott, I know you and I were.

I loved looking at the artifacts, the quarto and the folio with the pages misprinted, but I couldn't seem to get away from the photos at the end. I know I ranted at a few of you, but I'll do it again here because I'm just that passionate. Did any of you catch the portrait of Jorge Luis Borges? For those who don't know him, he's my blind Argentinean philosopher and was President of the National Libraries of Argentina for quite some time. He began to lose his sight in his 20's while studying in Europe and by the time he cam back and became involved politically, he was pretty much blind as a bat. Once the political climate settled down, he came to the forefront as an expert on Argentinean literature and poetry. I love his work and would recommend his poetry if you've got 5 minutes and want to read something breathtaking (my favorite might be "Poem Written In A Copy of Beowulf"). He would wait for students from the university serving detentions to wander by his office and snag them, forcing them to sit for hours and copy down the poetry he had written in his head. He once had some kind of organ-located-in-the-torso surgery with no drugs or anesthetic: he spent the 2 hour procedure lecturing the surgeons on the history of Argentinean literature. I just love this man.

He was kind of an odd duck. In a lecture called "Blindness" he said that what he missed most is the color red--the passion of it, the taste of it. He says blindness is not darkness but a sort of shifting gray pantomime, shadows of what really is. You can see it in his glazed, shifting eyes and drooping left eyelid, the way he leans his head on his cane as though waiting for an unfortunate student to dictate his verse to. You can almost see the cogs ticking behind his eyes....

Also, on an altogether unrelated note, Dali looked positively mad. Anyone else wild about this exhibit and/or tempted to go back on one of their free nights?

A quick little something...

I ditched the rock/popular music focus on my study, opting instead to look at Shakespeare on film and how it's been accepted by scholars and the American public. I did look on YouTube for some good Shakespearean videos - the user ShakespeareAndMore has some excellent choices: Olivier's final scene in King Lear is vital viewing - and, speaking of Olivier, bumped into this little vestige of my previous route of study. It's Peter Sellers, from the TV special The Music of Lennon & McCartney, way back in 1965.



It may not be relevant, but it’s at least amusing.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Apology

Editor of "The Shakespeare Fellowship" website has removed item from their website and apologized for inaccuracy.

ASH

"Shakespeare Fellowship" Website Posting about American Shakespeare course

Sage Readers:

Here is the posting from "The Shakespeare Fellowship":


Added 3/8/08

NYU/NYPL Shakespeare Course Requires Adherence to Stratford Party Line

It's official. To enroll in the NYU/Gallatin Interdisciplinary Seminar: "American Shakespeare" (Spring semester, 2008) students are required to be card carrying members of the Stratford cult.

The course description lists the two "requirements" for entrance as "1. A conviction that the plays of Shakespeare were written by Shakespeare" and "2. A belief that the works of Shakespeare constitute one of the cornerstones of world literature. "

The course, sponsored by will be held in the Humanities and Social Sciences library of the New York Public Library, is decribed as an opportunity to "discover the world of William Shakespeare at The New York Public Library. Ponder the textual problems of the quartos and folios. Explore various beautiful and unusual illustrated editions of Shakespeare' s plays and poems. Experience Shakespearean research for the 21st century through the Library's databases. "

What students obviously won't be doing in this course is asking any fundamental questions about Shakespeare, early modern literary studies, or the philosophy of inquiry in the human sciences. Those questions are forbidden: "fiat tenebras."

Thanks to Martin Hyatt for this news item.

Added 3/8/08

Shakespeare Diva defamed on the Web!

Sage Readers:

I am not precisely sure what a "card carrying Shakespearean" is, but I stand accused of the high crime of 'public Shakespeare indoctrination' ...

http://www.shakespearefellowship.org/news.html

Setting the Record Straight!

Dear NYU Shakespeareans and Sage Readers:

My recent posting informing you all of a then up-coming Shakespeare research session at NYPL, has prompted a flurry of reactions from readers beyonds the confines of our humble class. My email inbox has been flooded recently by a number of inquiring missives expressing concern over the issue of "free thought" in this course, as it relates to the question of Shakespeare's identity, personage and authorship.

The source of this consternation is the following passage that was lifted from the course description for the NYPL Shakespeare research session:

"Requirements: 1. A conviction that the plays of Shakespeare were written by Shakespeare. 2. A belief that the works of Shakespeare constitute one of the cornerstones of world literature."

I hope to here address, once and for all, that:

a.) These words are NOT mine, they were in fact lifted directly from the NYPL website/course catalog.
b.) Students in the NYU American Shakespeare Seminar are not required to hold any specific views of any kind, on 'Shakespeare' or any other subject
c.) The NYPL Shakespeare Research session was an optional course event, and is not in anyway connected to the NYU "American Shakespeare" seminar.
d.) The facilitator of the NYPL Shakespeare Research session is in no way connected to the NYU "American Shakespeare" Seminar, and his statements do not express the views of The Shakespeare Diva.

The Shakespeare Diva has always been a proponent of "free thought," and being a proud product of the X-Files generation advocates and promotes active questioning and healthy debate in all circumstances!

When time permits, after the ides of March, The Shakespeare Diva will muse upon the authorship question, or rather her favorite aspect of the authorship question, i.e., her near obsessive fascination with leading anti-Stratfordian, Delia Bacon.

Bardily yours,
Alycia Smith-Howard, "The Shakespeare Diva"

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Historical Society and Morgan

When Professor Smit-Howard told us that a librarian is worth his/her weight in gold, I hear her but I didn't really take it into account. After visiting the Historical Society and the Morgan and hearing our tour guides' knowledge and expertise in all of the subjets we discussed, I must say - I was floored. The Historical Society gave me such insight into the past, and what it must have been like to see early productions as well as the great fire of the theater. I have a much greater appreciation than I did before the visit.

The Morgan was so huge, that I got extremely overwhelmed by the books - art - music - and photography collections. It seemed like an endless structure. What I liked most was the combination of old and new integrated together. To have the Morgan buildings that were actually residences... and to see the studies of those brilliant collectors was so... COOL! I also loved the class atrium. It was the perfect relatable structure for a New York City audience. It gave me an understanding of the magnitude of such a place.

When I asked my question about personal collections, I was surprised at the answer I got. I went on a trip to Las Vegas with my family some years ago and Steve Martin was showing his vast collection of contemporary art in the Bellagio, I believe. He had an introdcution recorded for the viewers that basically stated how selfish he felt keeping this priceless art all to himself. I have to agree with him. I feel that private collectors are a bit selfish in their pursuits to own original works of art that should be accessible to all people. What good is a Picasso painting when only a few people get to see it every day? I suppose it is correct that those who are private collectors DO take care of their collectables, but no one could possibly have greater expertise than historians and preservation experts. It just seems wrong to me. Oh well... to each his own, I suppose.

All in all - both visits were truly fascinating.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Broadway . . . Here He Comes!

"The acclaimed production of Macbeth — which casts stage and screen star Patrick Stewart in the title role — is heading to Broadway."

Full article: http://www.playbill.com/news/article/115402.html

Monday, March 03, 2008

NY Historical Society of Worthy Individuals

From the beginning of this class, I have to say that your (Professor Howard) obsession and near- idolization of librarians has made a strange impression on me. Mainly, because I never really realized the work that went into being a librarian, beyond knowing which aisle to go to for comedy and which for non-fiction, and therefore never gave them the respect they deserved (in my mind) . From the second you said you had a degree in "Library Sciences" I realized there was something I was missing. Now, after hearing the archival work and labor that goes into the life of a librarian, specifically someone who works at an institution as concerned with preserving the present and past as much as the New York Historical Society, I feel guilty for the lack of credit I have given them. Recently, as I go through my daily life and am constantly buying and throwing things away, I keep finding myself wondering which of these everyday items would be useful to save, maybe even preserve? What things that we use and take for granted will be able to give future generations insight into the lives of people in 2008. It's a really interesting and non-American (where everything is always concerned with the next thing to come) mindset to have, and I feel as though it would drive me insane to have to seriously consider these things for a profession.
The thing that really stood out to me about our visit to the NY Historical Society was the obsession with the wealthy citizens over the normal ones. It seemed as though it was far more important for historians of the time to record and report on the elite of society rather than the impoverished or even middle class. The two most obnoxious books that I can recall were the "Who's Who in America," essentially a list of people of some sort of stature in society in the early to mid-1900s, and the class favorite list of Wealth in New York, which actually listed off the net-worths of the richest people of the time. I was disgusted and fascinated by these collections in the best possible way.

OH MY GOD! KEVIN SPACEY!!!!!

First off, I would like to apologize for my lack of posting on this fabulous little online get together. It was due to technical difficulties and I’m excited to finally be participating. Let me begin with my reaction to ‘Looking For Richard’. My first reaction was surprise at the fact that I had never even heard of a movie with such a star-packed cast. The purpose, made abundantly clear from the start of the movie, is for this gang of Shakespeare bullies to get everyone to really see what the big deal is about this guy Shakespeare. Yes—everybody knows the “To be or not to be’s” or the fact that 10 Things I Hate About You was modeled after Taming of a Shrew, but this is not enough for Pacino and his boys (and girl). They need to bring Shakespeare to the streets and get people excited about William Shakespeare for the right reasons and not just because it’s hip or considered to be something that should be common knowledge.

 

            Though people have tried in the past to make Shakespeare more accessible to the general public (i.e. through movies like 10 Things I Hate about You and the 90s remake of Romeo and Juliet), the unique aspect of Pacino’s mission seemed to lie in the fact that he was primarily concerned with the words of Wiliam Shakespeare and not his main idea. He wants people to see the beauty in these words that he, his actor friends, English teachers around the world, and general Shakespeare enthusiasts everywhere see; the elegance and magnificence of language that often gets thrown to the curb by our blog-obsessed generation. This was intriguing to me as I was really curious to see how he would approach it. Yes—the language and emotion in his words are extremely powerful, but I believe it’s more of something that one must develop their own interest in and pursue, more so than something that can be shoved in someone’s face. So intrigued I was and on I watched, and honestly, I was kind of disappointed.

 

            Yes- bringing Shakespeare to the people! What could be better? Taking it down from his pedestal of eloquence and intimidation and served in a harmless McDonalds bag that people have been eating from since their childhood, right? Not quite. On this point, I agree and disagree with Sara’s feelings toward the movie. While watching it, all I was thinking about was how much I like Kevin Spacey, and I was really enjoying it. I think he’s fantastic and seeing him in the cast really did draw me in. Until I realized what was going on. Yes, the only way in which he really makes the play accessible to American audiences is by casting famous American actors. Now, realizing what was happening, I felt betrayed by the movie. I do disagree with Sara, however, when she says that he is underestimating Americans and not giving us enough credit. I will admit that when I signed up for this class I thought it was a class studying Shakespeare and his works and as the class has progressed I have felt more and more like I know nothing about Shakespeare and everyone else came in with an extensive knowledge of his life and works. I feel unprepared to say the least. So, obviously, it is possible that he was not giving us enough credit as Americans, but from my perspective it seems as though we really do have a very superficial understanding of Shakespeare’s works. I have studied a few of his plays and put on an 8th grade production of Romeo and Juliet, but I would definitely classify myself as having a “pop” impression of Shakespeare. Therefore, I think, for myself, I would classify Pacino’s mission as failed. I appreciate his effort, but all he really did was show us his passion for Bill and essentially say, “Get it now?” And no, Mr. Pacino, I’m afraid I don’t.

Much Ado About Nothing - Gene Frankel Theatre, March 2008

Dear Shakespeare Scholars:

Just spotted a notice for this production of Much Ado at the Gene Frankel Theatre. I'd like for us to see this.
I think it will offer us a nice counterbalance to our visit to BAM for Macbeth. I think it will also give us an example for our further exploration of Sarah and Bahar's excellent points about 'mediation' and adaptation.

Best,
ASH

http://www.wideeyedproductions.com/muchado.html