William Shakespeare is the best-known writer in the English-speaking
world. Contrary to popular myth, we actually know more about him and his
career than we do about most dramatists of his era - the fruits of three
hundred years of fascinated research. Whilst we know less than we would
like about Shakespeare's private life, we do have a far clearer picture
of his professional career, and of the theatres and social structures
with which he was involved. And yet the significance of what we know is
fiercely contested and we are challenged by a host of contradictions.
Elizabethan actors were often classed as vagabonds yet some were also
servants to royalty who performed at court. All the roles in
Shakespeare's plays were acted by men, yet he wrote strong roles for
women from Lady Macbeth to Rosalind. So was Shakespeare a feminist
before his time? Richard Dutton tackles these and other issues which
keep Shakespeare, the most influential literary life in literary
history, at the centre of our cultural life today.