English
253/HST 236: Authority and Legitimacy in the Age of More and Shakespeare
William Oram
Howard Nenner
T Th 1:00-2:20 p.m.
During the sixteenth century
many factors--notably the religious reformation with its resulting
civil wars in Europe and the shifts in power relations between kings
and nobility--raised questions of what the limits of governmental
authority were, and indeed of how any government was legitimated.
In England the final stages of this questioning come with the civil
wars of the seventeenth century, but throughout the previous century
writers raise questions about the nature of the authority possessed
by kings and magistrates.
The course will consider
how a number of such writers, most importantly William Shakespeare
and Sir Thomas More, develop this inquiry. Shakespeare was a playwright,
More a lawyer and for a time Lord Chancellor of England. Yet both
of them were intensely aware of how fragile royal claims to special
authority were, and how easily they might be undermined.
The course will start by
considering two radically opposed Renaissance texts about princely
authority, James I's The True Law of Free Monarchies and
Machiavelli's The Prince . It will then focus on five of
Shakespeare's history plays, Richard II , 1 and 2 Henry
IV , Henry V , and Richard III in the order of
the historical development they chronicle. The first four plays
treat the usurpation of Richard II's throne and the subsequent attempts
of Henry IV and his son Henry V to legitimize their rule--a rule
originally based on that usurpation. We'll study Richard III
along with More's History of Richard III to consider
how both More and Shakespeare present the complex history of Richard's
reign as a compelling if simplified vision of Richard as tyrant
and indeed a kind of secular antichrist.
In the last part of the course
we'll focus on the dangerous court of Henry VIII and especially
the career of Sir Thomas More, which raises special problems of
authority. More's Utopia puts the usual assumptions about
authority in doubt, constructing a commonwealth without an hereditary
monarch or a nobility. The last two weeks of the course may read
other works of More, or they may focus on Shakespeare's King
Lear , in which all the themes of the course come together.
As part of the course we'll
watch seven movies, six for the Shakespeare plays including two
versions of Henry V (Olivier and Branaugh), and A Man
for All Seasons . There will be two class debates, two papers
and a final exam.
Enrollment is limited to
25. If you are interested in this course or have questions pertaining
to it, please see Bill Oram in Seelye 404. |